FIFA announced on Wednesday that its Council has unanimously agreed to a proposal to expand the number of participants at the FIFA Women’s World Cup from 24 to 32 as of the next edition of the tournament in 2023.
According to FIFA, the Council exceptionally made the decision remotely instead of during its next meeting scheduled for October 23-24 in Shanghai, as the bidding process for the 2023 tournament is already underway, and nine bidders are initially expected to submit bid books by October 4.
The new-format quadrennial tournament will have eight groups of four teams.
Members of the U.S. women’s national team celebrate after winning the Women’s World Cup Final against the Netherlands at Parc Olympique Lyonnais in Lyon, France, July 7, 2019. [File photo: IC]
FIFA also updated the hosting requirements and the timeline of the bidding process for 2023. Current bidding member associations have to reconfirm their interest in bidding in August, while any other eligible member associations can express their interest in bidding.
After the deadline for bid submission in December, publication of Bid Evaluation Report is expected in April 2020, with an expected appointment of hosts the following month.
The FIFA administration will consult with the confederations in terms of slot allocation, and it should be approved by the FIFA Council.
“The astounding success of this year’s FIFA Women’s World Cup in France made it very clear that this is the time to keep the momentum going and take concrete steps to foster the growth of women’s football,” said FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who had hailed the tournament held in France this summer “the best Women’s World Cup ever”.
“I am glad to see this proposal – the first of several – becoming a reality,” he added.
Prior to the conclusion of FIFA Women’s World Cup France, Infantino brought up five proposals including the Women’s World Cup expansion, alongside others as creation of Club World Cup for women and Women’s World League, doubling the prize money for the next Women’s World Cup, and doubling the investment committed to women’s football over the next four-year cycle.
Twelve teams participated in the inaugural Women’s World Cup in 1991, before the number of teams rose to 16 in 1999 and 24 in 2015.
“The expansion reaches far beyond the eight additional participating teams. It means that, from now on, dozens more member associations will organise their women’s football program knowing they have a realistic chance of qualifying.
“The FIFA Women’s World Cup is the most powerful trigger for the professionalisation of the women’s game, but it comes but once every four years and is only the top of a much greater pyramid. In the meantime, we all have a duty to do the groundwork and strengthen women’s football development infrastructure across all confederations,” Infantino pointed out.