May 8, 2024

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New Zealand, Norway, Philippines and Switzerland

New Zealand, Norway, Philippines and Switzerland

Group A will begin the competition at the 2023 Women’s World Cup starting on July 20.

The Women’s World Cup is set to begin in 2023. Next July 20th is the first match of the tournament and we decided to have an early x-ray of each of the competing teams at Contragolf.

Let’s begin Group A consists of New Zealand, Norway, Philippines and Switzerland. The locals are 26th in the FIFA rankings with 1699.7 points. The Norwegians, meanwhile, are 12th overall (1908.25), but they are seventh in UEFA, while the Swiss are 20th (1765.9), thirteenth on their continent. Finally, the Philippines scored 46th (1512.97).

Qualified for the World Cup

As for New Zealand, they qualified on June 25, 2020 when FIFA designated them as the host for the Women’s World Cup. Likewise, Norway topped Group F of the UEFA World Cup qualifiers and reached direct qualification. Armenia (10-0 x2), Kosovo (3-0 and 5-1), Albania (7-0 and 5-0), Poland (0-0 and 2-1) and Belgium (4-0 and 1) won. -0).

On the other hand, the Philippines is one of the four semi-finalists of the 2022 Women’s Asian Cup. The team defeated Thailand (1–0) and Indonesia (6–0) before losing to Australia (4–0) in the group stage. In the final stage, they eliminated Chinese Taipei, but eventually lost to runners-up South Korea.

Finally, Switzerland finished second in Group G of the European qualifiers, so they had to play a play-off. They beat Wales 2–1 to qualify for their second Women’s World Cup. They fell into Group A of the tournament.

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Group A Programming

  • New Zealand vs Norway | Thursday, July 20, 3:00am, Eden Park (Auckland) | Date 1
  • Philippines vs Switzerland | Friday, July 21, 1:00 am, Forsyth Barr Stadium (Dunedin) | Date 1
  • New Zealand vs Philippines | Tuesday, July 25, 1:30 am, Skye Stadium (Wellington) | Date 2
  • Switzerland vs Norway | Tuesday, July 25, 4:00 am, Waikato Stadium (Hamilton) | Date 2
  • Norway vs Philippines | Sunday, July 30, 3:00am, Eden Park (Auckland) | Date 3
  • Switzerland vs New Zealand | Sunday, July 30, 3:00 am, Forsyth Barr Stadium (Dunedin) | Date 3

Nominees for each examination

Ada Hegerberg, Kuro Reyden, Caroline Graham Hansen and Frida Mann also top the list of 23 Norwegians. Their big loss was Lisa Nalsund, who was unable to recover from her injury last February. TD Hedge Rice confirmed the list on June 19.

New Zealand, meanwhile, confirmed the pay of 23 this Friday, June 30. The 10 players were called up by their TD Zhitka Klimkova, who also revealed that three footballers will train with them as sparring partners in case one of the starters gets injured. They are Ava Collins, Mykayla Moore and Kate Taylor.

Meanwhile, Switzerland on Monday confirmed its 23 nominations for the 2023 Women’s World Cup. Paris Saint-Germain’s Ramona Bachmann heads the remuneration committee. Likewise, Riola Kshemaili, who plays for Freiburg, is also a big absentee. It was sidelined by a technical decision.

As for the Philippines, they have only released a provisional list for the 2023 World Cup. Of the 29 players nominated, 6 must drop out of FIFA’s required 23-man final list.

Photo: File