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Women's World Invitational Tournament: 21 Canada: December 19, 1987 4–0 Women's World Invitational Tournament: 22 Chinese Taipei: December 20, 1987 1–2 Women's World Invitational Tournament: 23 Japan: June 1, 1988 5–2 FIFA Women's Invitation Tournament: 24 Sweden: June 3, 1988 1–1 FIFA Women's Invitation Tournament: 25 Czechoslovakia ...
The team played its first match at the Mundialito tournament on August 18, 1985, coached by Mike Ryan, in which they lost 1–0 to Italy.In March 2004, two of its stars, Mia Hamm (who retired later that year after a post-Olympic team tour of the US) and Michelle Akers (who had already retired), were the only two women and the only two Americans named to the FIFA 100, a list of the 125 greatest ...
The 2015 Women's World Cup Final between the United States and Japan was the most watched soccer match, men's or women's, in American broadcast history. [105] It averaged 23 million viewers and higher ratings than the NBA finals and the Stanley Cup finals.
Women's World Cup Helsingborg, Sweden: Australia: 4–1 Julie Foudy, Joy Fawcett, Carla Overbeck (PK), Debbie Keller [14] June 13 Women's World Cup QF Gävle, Sweden: Japan: 4–0 Kristine Lilly (2), Tiffeny Milbrett, Tisha Venturini [15] June 15 Women's World Cup SF Västerås, Sweden: Norway: 0–1 n/a [16] June 17 Women's World Cup 3rd Place ...
The United States women’s national soccer team's pursuit of a World Cup three-peat has ended. The USWNT was knocked out of the World Cup after Sweden trumped the United States 5-4 on penalty ...
US women’s national soccer team captures Olympic gold — after strong play by Penn State alum. Josh Moyer. ... The 36-year-old goalkeeper played at Penn State from 2006-2009, where she was a ...
US women's soccer Olympic gold medals. If it's an Olympics, you can find the U.S. women's national team on the medals podium. The Americans have won five golds at the Olympics (1996, 2004, 2008 ...
The United States team lifted their 4th championship trophy in 2019. The United States women's national soccer team is the most successful women's national team in the history of the Women's World Cup, having won four titles, earning second-place once and third-place finishes three times.