HOME   NEWS   SPECIAL REPORT   PHOTO   COMMENTARY   VOICE   LEARNING CHINESE
NEWS > Sports
Facts, figures for all-time FIFA Women's World Cup finals
2007-09-30 04:24:29 Xinhua English

SHANGHAI, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- Following are the facts and figures for all-time FIFA women's world cup finals 1991-2003 prior to Sunday's final here:

UEFA has sent five representatives to the FIFA Women's World Cup final: 1991 with Norway (vs United States), in 1995 when Norway faced Germany, and in 2003 when Germany met Sweden. The United States have reached the final twice (1991 vs Norway and 1999 vs China, Asiaˇ¦s sole finalist to date), winning both times. The United States are also the only host country to have won the competition.

Birgit Prinz celebrated Germanys qualification for the final in1995, a few months before her 18th birthday. Michelle Akers won the Women's World Cup final in 1999 at 33 and a half years of age, while her team mate Mia Hamm was only 19 when the United States claimed the title in 1991.

The highest goal scorer has taken the FIFA Women's World Cup home on three occasions: in 1991 Michelle Akers (United States) scored ten goals, in 2003 Birgit Prinz (Germany) scored seven and in 1995 Ann Kristin Aarones (Norway) scored six.

The highest number of goals scored in a FIFA Women's World Cup Final is three (2-1 for Norway against Germany in 1991 and for Germany against Sweden in 2003). While the 2003 Final went to extra-time, a penalty shoot-out followed a goalless match in 1999 to determine the winners (USA).

Results of previous finals (tabulated under year, place, teams, result, winners)

1991 China Norway - USA 1-2 (1-1) United States

1995 Sweden Germany - Norway 0-2 (0-2) Norway

1999 United States United States - China 0-0, after extra time 5-4 penalty shootout United States

2003 United States Germany - Sweden 2-1, after extra time 1-1, 0-1 Germany

Until now the final has always been officiated by a European referee: Vadim Zhuk from Belarus led the 1991 final, followed four years later by Ingrid Jonsson from Sweden, in 1999 by her Swiss colleague Nicole Petignat, and in 2003 by Romanian Cristina Ionescu.

MORE NEWS
Thai twins, Tursunov win Thailand Open titles  
Russian Tursunov wins Thailand Open tennis title  
U.S. leads Norway 1-0 at halftime  
Marathon world record evolution  
Gebrselassie breaks marathon world record in Berlin  
Special Olympics, FIFA combined to promote soccer for mentally disabled  
Zambia advances to COSAFA Cup final  
Dawson knocks out Mendoza to retain WBC light heaveyweight title  

SINA English is the English-language destination for news and information about China. Find general information on life, culture and travel in China through our news and special reportsˇAor find business partners through our online Business Directory. For investment opportunities with SINA, please click the link "Investor" below.
| About SINA | Investor | Media Kit | Comments or Question? |
Copyright © 1996-SINA Corporation, All Rights Reserved