Big Guns Open
5th Women's World Cup
Richard DeLaurell
The 5th go-round for FIFA's Women's World Cup is just underway
in China and some things are different while others seem true to
past form.
To this point only the USA (China 1991, USA 1999), Norway (Sweden
1995) and Germany (USA 2003) have won the title and, truth to tell,
each competition has pretty much boiled down to a battle between
those same three big powers to sort out a winner. To this point
the rest of the world has lagged pretty far behind in developing
the women's game and the national teams of "the rest of the
world" have served as little more than cannon-fodder for the
three big guns when it has come time to crown a World Cup champ.
Witness Germany's goal-a-thon just two nights ago as they opened
their defense of the title against Argentina in group play, 11:0.
It is true that China and Sweden have had the odd upset and seem
to form something of a second-tier--also true that Brazil appears
to be making slow and steady progress--but the big three have pretty
much had things their way up to now.
In fact, in many ways, the history of the Women's World Cup thus
far is beginning to take on a shape not unlike that of the much-older
men's competition.
The fifth men's World Cup was contested in Switzerland in 1954
with West Germany emerging as surprise winners in the final match
over seemingly undefeatable Hungary. The day before the final, Uruguay
lost the third place match to Austria, 1:3.
Four years earlier Uruguay had won the World Cup with a surprise
defeat of home side Brazil. It was only the fourth time for the
competition, but the second win for the Blues who had won the very
first World Cup on home soil twenty years previous. (Uruguay chose
not to participate in the 1934 and '38 competitions which were won
by Italy in Italy and then again in France).
Over a half century since taking fourth, Uruguay's World Cup total
remains unchanged. It's early glories having been nearly completely
obscured by the behemoth, yellow-shirted neighbor to its north.
Indeed, Uruguay's place among the elite of even South American football
seems to grow more tenuous with each single-named artist that springs
from the streets of Rio or Sao Paulo to be the world's best for
two-, three-, or even four World Cups.
As the women of the US, Germany and Norway take to the fields
of the 2007 WWC they may do well to note history and take measures
to avoid repeating it.
The first step will be for those three to disabuse themselves as
quickly as possible of any illusion that their's will forever be
a three horse race. (Witness USA's hard-fought opening match draw
with North Korea earlier today, 2:2).
It is a bit of a different world into which the Women's World
Cup rather than the men's has been born. It is unlikely that any
national federation will be caught off-guard by the developing level
of competition, nor will any of those federations fail to recognize
the value in taking home the Cup.
This fifth WWC will no doubt see some surprises and, with luck,
perhaps even the emergence of a charismatic superstar, one capable
of bicycle-kicking the women's game to much greater prominence.
That, in itself, would best the history of the men by four years.
Group B Schedule
Sept. 11 vs. DPR of Korea
Sept. 14 vs. Sweden
Sept. 18 vs. Nigeria
Round of 16
Sept. 22
Sept. 23
Semifinals
Sept. 26
3d Place and Final
Sept. 30
Matches to be played in Chengdu, Hangzhou, Shanghai, Tianjin and
Wuhan.
Related MLS links
Beckham Finds It Hard
US Women Prepare For WWC 2007
Beckham Bandwagon
Bend
it like Beckham
MLS Preview 2006
MLS Preview 2004
MLS Final 2004
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