The Women's World Cup 2023 tournament is finally under way
The biggest FIFA Women's World Cup finally gets under way today, with Australia and New Zealand co-hosting the ninth edition. And, for the first time, it will feature 32 nations including defending world champions the United States.
New Zealand is launching the tournament against Norway at Eden Park before Australia play the Republic of Ireland at Stadium Australia, in Sydney, to get what could be the most-watched Women's World Cup, with more than 1.3 million tickets bought in advance for the 64 matches at 10 venues across nine cities. Organisers are targeting a record two billion television viewers for the 2023 edition, a figure that would double the audience that watched the 2019 World Cup in France.