List of FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The FIFA Women's World Cup (WWC) was first broadcast on television in time for the very first tournament in 1991 and now ranks in the top five for most watched sporting broadcasts in the world. Below is a list of the stations/companies that air the WWC for their respective countries. This page was created in 2015 and contains the information for the 2011 & 2015 tournaments and onward, except in cases where previous information on broadcasters can be found.[1]

Africa[edit]

Algeria[edit]

Angola[edit]

Benin[edit]

Botswana[edit]

Burkina Faso[edit]

Burundi[edit]

Cameroon[edit]

Cape Verde[edit]

Central African Republic[edit]

Chad[edit]

Comoros[edit]

Congo Brazzaville[edit]

Cote D'Ivoire[edit]

Democratic Republic of Congo[edit]

Djibouti[edit]

Equatorial Guinea[edit]

Egypt[edit]

Eritrea[edit]

Ethiopia[edit]

Gabon[edit]

Gambia[edit]

Ghana[edit]

Guinea Bissau[edit]

Guinea Conakry[edit]

Kenya[edit]

Lesotho[edit]

Liberia[edit]

Libya[edit]

Madagascar[edit]

Malawi[edit]

Mali[edit]

Mauritania[edit]

Mauritius[edit]

Morocco[edit]

Mozambique[edit]

Namibia[edit]

Niger[edit]

Nigeria[edit]

Rwanda[edit]

Reunion[edit]

Sao Tome and Principe[edit]

Senegal[edit]

Seychelles[edit]

Sierra Leone[edit]

Somalia[edit]

South Africa[edit]

Sudan[edit]

Swaziland[edit]

Tanzania[edit]

Togo[edit]

Tunisia[edit]

Uganda[edit]

Zambia[edit]

Zanzibar[edit]

Zimbabwe[edit]

Asia[edit]

Afghanistan[edit]

  • 2023– TBD
  • 2019– ATN

Bahrain[edit]

Bangladesh[edit]

Bhutan[edit]

Brunei[edit]

Cambodia[edit]

Hong Kong[edit]

India[edit]

Indonesia[edit]

Iran[edit]

Iraq[edit]

Japan[edit]

Jordan[edit]

North Korea[edit]

Laos[edit]

Kuwait[edit]

Lebanon[edit]

Malaysia[edit]

Maldives[edit]

Mongolia[edit]

  • 2023- Central Television

Myanmar[edit]

  • 2023– TBD
  • 2011– BecTero

Nepal[edit]

Oman[edit]

Pakistan[edit]

Palestine[edit]

People's Republic of China[edit]

Philippines[edit]

Qatar[edit]

Saudi Arabia[edit]

Singapore[edit]

South Korea[edit]

Sri Lanka[edit]

Syria[edit]

Taiwan[edit]

  • 2023– ELTA
  • 2011– ELTA

Thailand[edit]

  • 2023– TBD
  • 2019– PPTV
  • 2011– Admas World

Timor Leste[edit]

United Arab Emirates[edit]

Vietnam[edit]

  • 2023– National Assembly Television of Vietnam and VTVcab
  • 2011– Vietnam Football Media & VTV6

Yemen[edit]

Oceania[edit]

Australia[edit]

Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator Reporter(s) Studio host(s) Studio analyst(s)
2023 Seven Network David Basheer Grace Gill Emma Freedman
Adam Peacock
Bruce McAvaney
Mel McLaughlin
Heather Garriock and Elise Kellond-Knight
Optus Sport English World Feed Adriano Del Monte
Adamo De Nigris
Michelle Escobar
Kat Haddad
Breanna Holden
Narelle Sindos
Amy Duggan
Niav Owens
Kelly Somers
Claudio Fabiano
Joe Montemurro, Tanya Oxtoby, Heather Garriock, Rebecca Smith, Amy Harrison, Chloe Logarzo, Mark Schwarzer, Amy Chapman, Ashleigh Sykes, Catherine Cannuli, Jessica McDonald, María José Rojas, Scott McDonald, and Thomas Sørensen
2019 SBS David Basheer Sarah Walsh Tracey Holmes Craig Foster and Joey Peters
Optus Sport English World Feed Jules Breach
Niav Owens
Michelle Escobar
Amy Duggan
Mel McLaughlin
Richard Bayliss
Heather Garriock, Alicia Ferguson, Cheryl Salisbury, Mark Schwarzer, John Aloisi, Catherine Cannuli, Ashleigh Sykes, Georgia Yeoman-Dale, Amy Chapman, Tal Karp, Dean Heffernan, and Ante Juric
2015 SBS David Basheer Heather Garriock Vitor Sobral Lucy Zelic Sally Shipard and Joanne Peters

Cook Islands[edit]

Federated State of Micronesia[edit]

Fiji[edit]

French Polynesia[edit]

Kiribati[edit]

Nauru[edit]

New Caledonia[edit]

New Zealand[edit]

Niue[edit]

Palau[edit]

Papua New Guinea[edit]

Samoa[edit]

Solomon Islands[edit]

Tonga[edit]

Tuvalu[edit]

Vanuatu[edit]

Wallis and Futuna[edit]

Europe[edit]

Albania[edit]

Andorra[edit]

Armenia[edit]

Austria[edit]

Azerbaijan[edit]

Belarus[edit]

Belgium[edit]

Bosnia-Herzegovina[edit]

Bulgaria[edit]

Channel Islands[edit]

Croatia[edit]

Cyprus[edit]

Czech Republic[edit]

Denmark[edit]

Estonia[edit]

Faroe Islands[edit]

Finland[edit]

France[edit]

Georgia[edit]

Germany[edit]

  • 2023– ARD/ZDF
  • 2019– ARD/ZDF
  • 2015– Eurosport & ARD/ZDF
  • 2011– Eurosport & ARD/ZDF

Greece[edit]

Greenland[edit]

Hungary[edit]

Iceland[edit]

Ireland[edit]

Isle of Man[edit]

Israel[edit]

Italy[edit]

Kazakhstan[edit]

Kosovo[edit]

Latvia[edit]

Liechtenstein[edit]

Lithuania[edit]

Luxembourg[edit]

Malta[edit]

Moldova[edit]

Monaco[edit]

Montenegro[edit]

Netherlands[edit]

North Macedonia[edit]

Norway[edit]

Poland[edit]

Portugal[edit]

Romania[edit]

Russia[edit]

San Marino[edit]

Serbia[edit]

Slovakia[edit]

Slovenia[edit]

Spain[edit]

Sweden[edit]

Switzerland[edit]

Turkey[edit]

Ukraine[edit]

Vatican City[edit]

United Kingdom[edit]

Year Channel Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Studio Host Studio analyst(s)
2023 BBC Robyn Cowen
Vicki Sparks
Jonathan Pearce
Conor McNamara
Steven Wyeth
Rachel Brown-Finnis
Karen Bardsley
Sue Smith
Anita Asante
Gilly Flaherty
Gabby Logan
Reshmin Chowdhury
Alex Scott
Fara Williams, Steph Houghton, Ellen White, Laura Georges, Fern Whelan, Jonas Eidevall, and Scott Booth
ITV Seb Hutchinson
Sam Matterface
Pien Meulensteen
Tom Gayle
Emma Hayes
Siobhan Chamberlain
Lucy Ward
Laura Woods
Seema Jaswal
Michelle Owen
Karen Carney, Eniola Aluko, Jill Scott, Fran Kirby, Kim Little, Emma Byrne, Rachel Corsie, Vicky Losada, and Jen Beattie
2019[7] BBC Jonathan Pearce
Robyn Cowen
Mark Scott
Sue Smith
Scott Booth
Lucy Ward
Faye White
Gabby Logan
Eilidh Barbour
Alex Scott, Hope Solo, Gemma Fay, Dion Dublin, Casey Stoney, Laura Bassett, Rachel Brown-Finnis, and Jordan Nobbs
2015[8] Jonathan Pearce
Steve Wilson
Sue Smith
Lucy Ward
Jacqui Oatley Rachel Yankey, Rachel Brown-Finnis, Natasha Dowie, and Trevor Sinclair
2011[9][10] Guy Mowbray Lucy Ward Gabby Logan Martin Keown, Sue Smith, and Jo Potter
2007[11] Gavin Peacock and Karen Walker

North America[edit]

Canada[edit]

English-language television[edit]

  • 2023– CTV & TSN
  • 2019– CTV & TSN
  • 2015– CTV & TSN
  • 2011– CBC & Sportsnet
Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator Reporter Studio Host Studio Analysts
2023 CTV
TSN
In Scarborough, ON:
Luke Wileman (Canada matches)
English World Feed
(other matches)
In Scarborough, ON:
Amy Walsh
(Canada matches)
English World Feed
(other matches, subject to availability)
Claire Hanna In Australia:
Lindsay Hamilton[12]
In Scarborough, ON:
Laura Diakun and Raegan Subban
Mark Roe (highlights show and match of the day)
In Australia:
Carmelina Moscato and Clare Rustad
In Scarborough, ON:
Amy Walsh and Erin McLeod
From home in the US via video link:
Janine Beckie
2019 In Scarborough, ON:
Carmelina Moscato
(Canada matches)
Laura Diakun In Scarborough, ON:
Kate Beirness
In Scarborough, ON:
Diana Matheson, Clare Rustad and Kaylyn Kyle
2015 Jason de Vos
(Canada matches)
Brian Williams
Sheri Forde
Cabral Richards
Kate McKenna
James Duthie (on-site)
Jennifer Hedger (studio)
Kara Lang (on-site)
Kristian Jack and Clare Rustad (studio)
2011 CBC English World Feed Brenda Irving Scott Russell Clare Rustad and Jason De Vos
Sportsnet Louis Jean
Stephen Brunt
Gerry Dobson Kara Lang and Craig Forrest

Notes

  • CTV and TSN used their own announcers for all Canadian games during the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, and U.S. matches from the round of 16 onward. For all other matches they used the English World Feed.

French-language television[edit]

Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator Reporter Studio Host Studio Analysts
2023 RDS Claudine Douville (lead)
Émilie Duquette
Jean Gounelle (lead)
Valmie Ouellet
Marinette Pichon
Émilie Duquette[13] Valmie Ouellet
Marinette Pichon
2019 Claudine Douville Jean Gounelle Olivier Brett Valmie Ouellet
2015

Notes

  • RDS broadcast talent worked from Bell Media RDS Studio in Montréal, Quebec, Canada with the exception of the 2015 WWC Final, when Claudine Douville and Jean Gounelle were on site at BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Mexico[edit]

United States[edit]

English-language television[edit]

Final Match[edit]
Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Sideline reporter Studio host Studio analyst(s)
2023 Fox JP Dellacamera Aly Wagner Rob Stone
Stuart Holden (player-only panel)
Alexi Lalas, Carli Lloyd, and Ariane Hingst
Kate Gill (player-only panel)
Joe Machnik (rules analyst)
2019 Alex Curry
Jenny Taft (outside the stadium in Lyon)
Rob Stone (in Paris) Alexi Lalas, Heather O'Reilly, Ariane Hingst, Eni Aluko, and Kelly Smith (in Paris)
Karina LeBlanc (outside the stadium in Lyon)
Christina Unkel (rules analyst)
2015 Tony DiCicco and Cat Whitehill Jenny Taft Rob Stone and Kate Abdo Alexi Lalas, Heather Mitts, Eric Wynalda, Ariane Hingst, and Kelly Smith
2011 ESPN Ian Darke Julie Foudy Bob Holtzman Bob Ley and Rebecca Lowe Brandi Chastain, Brianna Scurry, Mia Hamm, and Tony DiCicco
2007 JP Dellacamera Julie Foudy Rob Stone Heather Mitts
2003 ABC JP Dellacamera Wendy Gebauer and Tony DiCicco Tisha Hoch Terry Gannon
1999 JP Dellacamera Wendy Gebauer Chris McKendry Rob Stone and Robin Roberts
1995 NO BROADCAST
(ESPN2 aired 3rd place match instead after US lost semifinal match to Norway)
1991 SportsChannel America Randy Hahn Rick Davis
Other rounds[edit]
Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Sideline reporter Studio host Studio analyst(s)
2023 Fox
FS1
FS2
In Aus/NZ:
JP Dellacamera
Jacqui Oatley
In Australia:
John Strong
In Los Angeles:
Kate Scott
Jenn Hildreth (on loan from ESPN)
In Aus/NZ:
Aly Wagner
Lori Lindsey
In Australia:
Kyndra de St. Aubin
In Los Angeles:
Danielle Slaton
Warren Barton
Tom Rinaldi
Jenny Taft
Rob Stone (lead)
John Strong (fill-in)
Stuart Holden (player-only panel)
Jimmy Conrad (World Cup Now on Twitter)
Alexi Lalas, Carli Lloyd, Karina LeBlanc, Kate Gill, Heather O'Reilly, Ariane Hingst, and Stuart Holden
Leslie Osborne and Melissa Ortiz (World Cup Now on Twitter)
Mark Clattenburg and Joe Machnik (rules analyst)
Chris Fallica (betting analyst)[14]
2019 In France:
JP Dellacamera
Derek Rae
In Los Angeles:
Jenn Hildreth
Lisa Byington
Glenn Davis
In France:
Aly Wagner
Danielle Slaton
In Los Angeles:
Kyndra de St. Aubin
Cat Whitehill
Angela Hucles
Alex Curry
Grant Wahl
Rob Stone and Jenny Taft (France)
Kate Abdo and Mike Hill (Los Angeles)
Aaron West (World Cup Now on Twitter)
Alexi Lalas, Eniola Aluko, Ariane Hingst, Kate Gill, Karina LeBlanc, Heather O'Reilly, and Kelly Smith (France)
Leslie Osborne, Christie Pearce Rampone and Maurice Edu (Los Angeles)
Christina Unkel (rules analyst)
2015 JP Dellacamera
Justin Kutcher
Jenn Hildreth
Glenn Davis
John Strong
Tony DiCicco and Cat Whitehill
Aly Wagner
Kyndra de St. Aubin
Christine Latham
Angela Hucles
Danielle Slaton
Jenny Taft
Julie Stewart-Binks
Grant Wahl (at-large)
Rob Stone
Kate Abdo
Alexi Lalas, Heather Mitts, Eric Wynalda, Mónica González, Ariane Hingst, Angela Hucles, Christine Latham, Leslie Osborne, Kelly Smith, Stuart Holden, and Dr. Joe Machnik (rules analyst)
2011 ESPN
ESPN2
Ian Darke
Adrian Healey
Beth Mowins
Julie Foudy
Kate Markgraf
Tony DiCicco
Cat Whitehill
Bob Holtzman Bob Ley
Rebecca Lowe
Julie Foudy, Brandi Chastain, Brianna Scurry, Mónica González, Alicia Ferguson, Viola Odebrecht, Mia Hamm, and Tony DiCicco
2007 JP Dellacamera
Adrian Healey
Julie Foudy
Tony DiCicco
Lori Walker
Jaime Motta Rob Stone Heather Mitts
2003 ABC
ESPN
ESPN2
JP Dellacamera
Beth Mowins
Erica Herskowitz
Wendy Gebauer
Tony DiCicco
Tom Stone
Tisha Hoch Rob Stone and Terry Gannon Heather Mitts
1999[15] JP Dellacamera
Bob Ley
Holly Rowe
Derek Rae
Wendy Gebauer
Seamus Malin
Amy Allmann
Chris McKendry Rob Stone and Robin Roberts
1995 ESPN
ESPN2
JP Dellacamera Amy Allmann

Notes[edit]

  • ESPN2 (US) broadcast only matches involving the US Women's National Team during the 1995 Women's World Cup in Sweden. The final match was NOT available on television in the US.
  • ESPN broadcast all matches for the 1999 Women's World Cup, but ESPN cut it back from 32 to 18 for 2003 due to conflicts with college football and the NFL.
  • 1999 featured the highest rated Women's Soccer match with the US/ China match until 2015. 11.4% of the nation's televisions tuned into the match.[16]
  • 2007 was the first Women's World Cup streamed online. All 32 matches were streamed on the fairly new ESPN 360, but games were not archived. 2007 is also the only year games were produced in studio. ESPN produced all the opening round matches in studio and didn't send their own broadcast team to China until the quarterfinals.
  • 2011 became the first Women's World Cup to have games archived on ESPN3.
  • 2015 became the first Women's World Cup to have the English World Feed available in the US. Fox used the English World Feed for their archive on the FOX Sports 2Go. 2015 also streamed games on the FOX Sports Go.
  • The USA/Japan 2015 Final became the highest ever rated soccer match in the US. 84.1% of the nation tuned into the match on Fox. An average 25.4 million viewers watched the entire match, with 30.9 viewers catching the final 15 minutes of the match. Spanish network Telemundo, drew another 1.27 million viewers to boost the overall viewership to 26.7 million.[17]
  • For 2023, FOX Sports will put 29 matches on FOX free-to-air broadcast, and 35 matches on FS1. All 64 matches will be available via authenticated streaming for pay TV subscribers via the FOX Sports App. (FOX does NOT offer an over-the-top premium streaming service in the US.)[18]

Spanish-language television[edit]

Year Network Play-by-play Color commentator(s) (Match Analysts) / Studio Pundits Studio host(s) Reporter(s)
2023 Telemundo
Universo
TeleXitos (2023 only)
Peacock Premium
(streaming in Spanish, 2023 only)
In Aus/NZ:
Andrés Cantor (lead)[19]
In Miami:
Copán Álvarez
Sammy Sadovnik
Jorge Calvo
Daniella López Guajardo (on loan from Fox Deportes)
In Aus/NZ:
Manuel Sol and Natalia Astrain (co-lead)
In Australia:
Deyna Castellanos
In Miami:
Eduardo Biscayart
Diana Rincón (on loan from ESPN South America)
Isabella Echeverri
Janelly Farías
Kenti Robles
Maxi Rodríguez
Jaime Herrera Garduño and Lucila Venegas (rules analyst)
In Australia:
Miguel Gurwitz
Ana Jurka
In Aus/NZ:
Carlota Vizmanos
Carlos Yustis
In New Zealand:
Pablo Aguabella (Costa Rica matches only)
In Miami:

Copán Álvarez
Diana Rincón (on loan from ESPN South America)
Verónica Rodríguez (Zona Mixta)

2019 Andrés Cantor (lead)
Copán Álvarez (final match)
Sammy Sadovnik
Erasmo Provenza
Diego Pessolano
Alejandro Pérez
Manuel Sol (lead)
Viviana Vila (lead, final match)
Deyna Castellanos
Eduardo Biscayart
Amelia Valverde
Mónica González
Janelly Farías
Marco Antonio Rodríguez (rules analyst)
Ana Jurka
Carlota Vizmanos
Carlos Yustis
2015[20] Andrés Cantor (lead)
Sammy Sadovnik
Copán Álvarez
Carlos Yustis
Sammy Sadovnik (final match)
Manuel Sol (lead)
Carlos Hermosillo
Frederik Oldenburg
Andrea Rodebaugh
2011 Univision
Galavision
Telefutura
Jorge Pérez-Navarro Andrea Rodebaugh
2007 Pablo Ramirez Fátima Leyva
2003 Jorge Ramos

Notes[edit]

  • For 2023, Telemundo Deportes will put ALL 64 matches on both linear TV (36 matches on Telemundo, 28 matches on Universo and TeleXitos) and over-the-top streaming via Peacock Premium.

English World Feed[edit]

Year Site Main commentator (Play-by-play) Co-commentator (Match analyst)
2023 Adelaide & Brisbane
Brisbane
Melbourne, Auckland, & Brisbane
Perth
Sydney & Adelaide
Auckland & Sydney
Dunedin
Hamilton
Wellington
Simon Brotherton
Kevin Keatings
Simon Hill
Mark Scott
Robbie Thomson
Steve Wilson (lead: opening match and final match)
John Roder
Paul Walker
Chris Wise
Amy Chapman (lead: Australia matches and final match)
Melissa Barbieri
Laura Bassett
Izzy Christiansen
Rehanne Skinner
2019 Grenoble, Montpellier, & Lyon
Nice & Montpellier
Reims, Valenciennes & Nice
Paris
Le Havre
Rennes
Steve Wilson (lead)
Mark Tompkins
John Roder
Kevin Keatings
Gary Bloom
Jacqui Oatley
2015 Edmonton
Ottawa & Montreal
Winnipeg
Vancouver
Moncton
Mark Tompkins
Martin Fisher
Kevin Keatings
John Roder
Dave Woods
2011 Sinsheim & Dresden
Berlin, Augsburg & Frankfurt
Bochum & Monchengladbach
Wolfsburg & Leverkusen
Gary Bloom
John Helm
John Roder
Steve Banyard

Notes

  • Co-commentators for 2023 tournament will be used for at least one match per day in the group stages and every match for knockout stages.

South/Central America and American Island Nations[edit]

America Samoa[edit]

Anguilla[edit]

Antigua and Barbuda[edit]

Argentina[edit]

Aruba[edit]

Bahamas[edit]

Barbados[edit]

Belize[edit]

Bermuda[edit]

Bolivia[edit]

  • 2023– TBD
  • 2019– Bolivisión, Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
  • 2015- Bolivisión, Tigo Sports, Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
  • 2011- Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
  • 2007- TVP, Red UNO, Bolivisión, Canal 11 & Sportmania
  • 2003- TVP, Canal 11, Red UNO, TVP, Bolivisión, Multivisión & Supercanal
  • 1999- BT

Brazil[edit]

Channel Type 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019 2023
Rede Bandeirantes Broadcast Yes Yes Yes Yes
Rede Globo Broadcast Yes Yes
Rede Record Broadcast Yes
TV Brasil Broadcast Yes
BandSports Subscription Yes Yes Yes All matches
ESPN Brasil Subscription Yes Yes Yes Yes
SporTV Subscription Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes All matches All matches
  • 1995 & 1999 - Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana. Rede Bandeirantes is a current member. Rede Globo and SporTV are former members.

British Virgin Islands[edit]

Cayman Islands[edit]

Chile[edit]

  • 2023- Chilevisión & D Sports
  • 2019- Chilevisión, Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
  • 2015– Chilevisión, CDF & DirecTV Sports
  • 2011– Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
  • 2007- La Red, Mega, Chilevisión, Canal 13 & Canal del Fútbol
  • 2003- TVN, Canal 13, Mega, La Red, Chilevisión, Metrópolis Intercom & VTR
  • 1999- SKY

Colombia[edit]

Costa Rica[edit]

  • 2023– TBD
  • 2019– Teletica
  • 2015– Teletica
  • 2011–Teletica

Cuba[edit]

Curacao[edit]

Dominica[edit]

Dominican Republic[edit]

Ecuador[edit]

El Salvador[edit]

  • 2023– Canales 2, 4, 6
  • 2019– Canales 2, 4, 6
  • 2015– DirecTV Sports

Grenada[edit]

Guadeloupe[edit]

Guam[edit]

Guatemala[edit]

Guyana[edit]

Haiti[edit]

Honduras[edit]

Jamaica[edit]

Martinique[edit]

Montserrat[edit]

Nicaragua[edit]

  • 2023– Canal 2 & Canal 10
  • 2019– Canal 2 & Canal 10
  • 2015– DirecTV Sports

Panama[edit]

Paraguay[edit]

Peru[edit]

Puerto Rico[edit]

St. Kitts and Nevis[edit]

St. Lucia[edit]

St. Vincent[edit]

Suriname[edit]

Trinidad and Tobago[edit]

Turks and Caicos Islands[edit]

Uruguay[edit]

US Virgin Islands[edit]

Venezuela[edit]

  • 2023- Televen
  • 2019- DirecTV
  • 2015– DirecTV
  • 2011– Meridiano Televisión, DirecTV

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasters" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Japan Avoids Women's World Cup TV Blackout With Late Deal". AFP News. 13 July 2023. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  3. ^ "TV放送" [TV broadcast] (in Japanese). Japan Football Association. Retrieved 16 July 2023.
  4. ^ "TV放送 | FIFA 女子ワールドカップ フランス 2019" [TV broadcasting | FIFA Women's World Cup France 2019] (in Japanese). Japan Football Association. Retrieved 12 June 2023.
  5. ^ "テレビ放送 | FIFA女子ワールドカップ カナダ2015" [TV broadcasting | FIFA Women's World Cup Canada 2015] (in Japanese). Japan Football Association. Retrieved 12 June 2023.
  6. ^ "Cignal TV secures broadcast rights to FIFA Women's World Cup". onesports.ph. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  7. ^ "BBC launches summer of women's sport season". BBC Media Centre. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  8. ^ "World Cup 2015: Women's Football live on the BBC". TV News Room. 23 November 2014. Retrieved 11 May 2015.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ "Women's World Cup coverage returns to BBC". Sports Pro Media. 23 May 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
  10. ^ "BBC to follow Eng;and at the Women's World Cup". Digital Spy. 20 May 2011. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
  11. ^ "BBC Sport – Fifa Women's World Cup Finals". Sports Pro Media. Archived from the original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2007.
  12. ^ "TSN and CTV Deliver FIFA WOMen's WORLD CUP AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND 2023™, Featuring Live Coverage of Every Match, Kicking off July 20 - Bell Media".
  13. ^ "Les 64 matchs de la Coupe du monde féminine de la FIFA, Australie et Nouvelle-Zélande 2023 présentés sur les plateformes de RDS dès le 20 juillet - Bell Media".
  14. ^ "FOX Sports Welcomes Carli Lloyd as Its Newest Analyst for FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023™ - Fox Sports Press Pass".
  15. ^ Jones, Grahame L. (16 June 1999). "All 32 Games Will Be Televised". LA Times. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  16. ^ "Women's World Cup gets whopping ESPN TV rating". USA Today. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
  17. ^ "FIFA women's World Cup TV ratings for U.S. vs. Japan a smash hit". The Denver Post. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  18. ^ "FOX Sports Announces FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023™ Broadcast Schedule - Fox Sports Press Pass".
  19. ^ "Telemundo's increased women's World Cup coverage is another sign of women's soccer's growth". 18 April 2023.
  20. ^ "NBC DEPORTES ANNOUNCES ROSTER OF ON-AIR TALENT FOR 2015 FIFA WORLD CUP EVENTS". NBC Universal Media Village. Retrieved 26 May 2015.