List of FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasters
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: lists of dates in reverse chronological order, contrary to WP:DATELIST. (December 2018) |
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[]
Algeria[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sports & Eurosport
Angola[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Benin[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Botswana[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Burkina Faso[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Burundi[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Cameroon[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Cape Verde[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Central African Republic[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Chad[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Comoros[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Congo Brazzaville[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Cote d'Ivorie[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Democratic Republic of Congo[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Djibouti[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Ecuatorial Guinea[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Egypt[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Eritrea[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Ethiopia[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Gabon[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Gambia[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Ghana[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Guinea Bissau[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Guinea Conakry[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Kenya[]
- 2015– StarTimes Sports
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Lesotho[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Liberia[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Libya[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Madagascar[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Malawi[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Mali[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Mauritania[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Mauritius[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Morocco[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Mozambique[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Namibia[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Niger[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Nigeria[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Rwanda[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Reunion[]
- 2019– Canal+
Senegal[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Seychelles[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Sierra Leone[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Somalia[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
South Africa[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Sudan[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Swaziland[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Tanzania[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Togo[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Tunisia[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Uganda[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Zambia[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Zanzibar[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Zimbabwe[]
- 2011– African Union of Broadcasting & SuperSport
Asia[]
Afghanistan[]
- 2019– ATN
Bahrain[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Bangladesh[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
Bhutan[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
Brunei[]
- 2019– MEASAT Satellite Systems
- 2015– MEASAT Satellite Systems
- 2011– MEASAT Satellite Systems
Cambodia[]
- 2011– CBS Cambodia
Hong Kong[]
- 2011– I-CABLE
India[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
Indonesia[]
- 2015– PT Inter-Sports Marketing
- 2011– M-League
Iran[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Iraq[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Japan[]
- 2019– NHK, Fuji TV, & J Sports Corporation
- 2015– NHK, Fuji TV, & J Sports Corporation
- 2011– NHK, Fuji TV, & J Sports Corporation
Jordan[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
North Korea[]
- 2019– Seoul Broadcasting System
- 2015– Seoul Broadcasting System
Laos[]
- 2011– Asian Broadcast Union
Kuwait[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Lebanon[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Malaysia[]
- 2019– Astro
- 2015– Astro
- 2011– Astro
Maldives[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
- 2011– MediaNet
Myanmar[]
- 2011– BecTero
Nepal[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
Oman[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Pakistan[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
Palestine[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
People's Republic of China[]
- 2019– China Central Television
- 2015– China Central Television
- 2011– China Central Television
Qatar[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Saudi Arabia[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Singapore[]
- 2011– StarHub TV
South Korea[]
- 2019– Seoul Broadcasting System
- 2015– Seoul Broadcasting System
- 2011– Seoul Broadcasting System (including SBS Sports; redistributed to Korea Broadcasting System including KBS N Sports and Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation including MBC Sports+)
Sri Lanka[]
- 2015– Multi Screen Media
- 2011– Asian Broadcast Union
Syria[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport & Eurosport
Taipei[]
- 2011– ELTA
Thailand[]
- 2011– Admas World
Timor Leste[]
- 2011– Asian Broadcast Union
United Arab Emirates[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Vietnam[]
- 2011– Vietnam Football Media & VTV6
Yemen[]
- 2019– beIN Media Group
- 2015– beIN Media Group
- 2011– Al Jazeera Sport
Oceania[]
Australia[]
- 2019– SBS and Optus Sport
- 2011, 2015– SBS
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator | Reporter | Studio host | Studio analyst(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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 | Lucy Zelic | Sally Shipard and Joanne Peters |
Cook Islands[]
Federated State of Micronesia[]
Fiji[]
French Polynesia[]
- 2019– Canal+
Kiribati[]
Nauru[]
New Caledonia[]
- 2019– Canal+
New Zealand[]
Niue[]
Palau[]
Papua New Guinea[]
Samoa[]
Solomon Islands[]
Tonga[]
Tuvalu[]
Vanuatu[]
Wallis and Futuna[]
- 2019– Canal+
Europe[]
Albania[]
- 2019– Radiotelevisioni Shqiptar
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Andorra[]
Armenia[]
- 2019– Public Television & Radio Armenia
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Austria[]
- 2019– Oesterreichischer Rundfunk
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Azerbaijan[]
- 2019– Ictimai
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Belarus[]
- 2019– Belaruskaja Tele-Radio Companija
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Belgium[]
- 2019– Vlaamse Radio en Televisiemroep & Radio Télévision Belge de la Communauté Française
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Bosnia-Herzegovina[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Bulgaria[]
- 2019– Balgarska Nationala Televizija
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Channel Islands[]
Croatia[]
- 2019– Hrvatska Radiotelevizija
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Cyprus[]
- 2019– Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Czech Republic[]
- 2019– Ceska Televize
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Denmark[]
- 2019– TV2 Denmark
- 2015– TV2 Denmark
- 2011– Eurosport & Sveriges Television
Estonia[]
- 2019– Estonian Public Broadcasting
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Faroe Islands[]
- 2019– Sveriges Television & TV2 Denmark
- 2015– Sveriges Television
- 2011– Sveriges Television
Finland[]
- 2019– Yleisradio OY
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport & Sveriges Television
France[]
FYR Macedonia[]
- 2019– Macedonian Radio and Television
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
Georgia[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Germany[]
- 2019– ARD/ZDF
- 2015– Eurosport & ARD/ZDF
- 2011– Eurosport & ARD/ZDF
Greece[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Greenland[]
- 2019– SVT & TV2 Denmark
- 2015– SVT & TV2 Denmark
Hungary[]
- 2019– Maygar Televizo
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Iceland[]
- 2019– Icelandic National Broadcasting Service
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Ireland[]
- 2019– RTÉ & TG4
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Isle of Man[]
Israel[]
- 2019– IPBC
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Italy[]
Kazakhstan[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– European Broadcasting Union
Kosovo[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– European Broadcasting Union
Latvia[]
- 2019– Latvijas Televizija
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Liechtenstein[]
- 2019– SRG SSR
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Lithuania[]
- 2019– Lietuvos Radijas Ir Televizija
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Luxembourg[]
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Malta[]
- 2019– Public Broadcasting Services Ltd.
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Moldova[]
- 2019– European Broadcasting Union
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Monaco[]
- 2019– Canal+
- 2015�� Eurosport & Metropole 6
- 2011– Eurosport & Télévision Française 1
Montenegro[]
- 2019– Radiotelevizija Crne Gore
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– European Broadcasting Union
Netherlands[]
- 2019– Nederlandse Omroep Stichting
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Norway[]
- 2019– TV2, & Norwegian broadcasting corporation
- 2015– Eurosport, TV2, & Norwegian broadcasting corporation
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Poland[]
- 2023- Viaplay
- 2019– Telewizja Polska SA
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Portugal[]
- 2019– Radio e Televisao de Portugal
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Romania[]
- 2019– Televiziunea Romana
- 2015– European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Russia[]
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
San Marino[]
- 2019– Radiotelevisione Italiana * SKY Italia
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport
Serbia[]
- 2019– Radiotelevizija Srbije
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Slovakia[]
- 2019– Radio and Television Slovakia
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Slovenia[]
- 2019– Radiotelevizija Slovenija
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Spain[]
- 2019– RTVE
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport
Sweden[]
Switzerland[]
- 2019– SRG SSR
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Turkey[]
- 2019– Turkiye Radyo-Televizyon Kurumu
- 2015– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Ukraine[]
- 2019– Public Broadcasting Company of Ukraine
- 2015– Eurosport
- 2011– Eurosport & European Broadcasting Union
Vatican City[]
United Kingdom[]
Year | Channel | Play-by-play | Color commentator(s) | Studio Host | Studio analyst(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019[2] | 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[3] | Jonathan Pearce Steve Wilson |
Sue Smith Lucy Ward |
Jacqui Oatley | Rachel Yankey, Rachel Brown-Finnis, Natasha Dowie, and Trevor Sinclair | |
2011[4][5] | Guy Mowbray | Lucy Ward | Gabby Logan | Martin Keown, Sue Smith, and Jo Potter | |
2007[6] | Gavin Peacock and Karen Walker |
North America[]
Canada[]
English-language television[]
- 2019– CTV & TSN
- 2015– CTV & TSN
- 2011– CBC & Sportsnet
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator | Reporter | Studio Host | Studio Analysts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | CTV TSN |
Luke Wileman | Carmelina Moscato | Laura Diakun | Kate Beirness | Diana Matheson, Clare Rustad, and Kaylyn Kyle |
2015 | Jason de Vos | 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
- CBC and Sportsnet 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.
- Before the 2015 Women's World Cup, CTV and TSN simulcast the ESPN/ABC broadcasts.
French-language television[]
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator | Reporter | Studio Host | Studio Analysts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | RDS | Claudine Douville | ||||
2015 | RDS | Claudine Douville |
Mexico[]
- 2019– Televisa
- 2015– Televisa
- 2011– Televisa & TV Azteca
United States[]
English-language television[]
Finals[]
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator(s) | Sideline reporter | Studio host | Studio analyst(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Fox | |||||
2019 | JP Dellacamera | Aly Wagner | Rob Stone and Jenny Taft | Alexi Lalas, Heather O'Reilly, Ariane Hingst, Eni Aluko, Kelly Smith, and Karina LeBlanc | ||
2015 | JP Dellacamera | 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 | Heather Mitts |
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[]
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator(s) | Sideline Reporter | Studio host | Studio analyst(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Fox FS1 FS2 |
|||||
2019 | JP Dellacamera Derek Rae Glenn Davis Lisa Byington |
Aly Wagner Danielle Slaton Angela Hucles Kyndra de St. Aubin Cat Whitehill |
Grant Wahl |
Rob Stone and Jenny Taft (France) Kate Abdo and Mike Hill (Los Angeles) Aaron West (digital) |
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) (rules analyst) | |
2015 | JP Dellacamera Justin Kutcher 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 |
Jaime Motta | Rob Stone | Heather Mitts | |
2003 | ABC ESPN ESPN2 |
JP Dellacamera Beth Mowins |
Wendy Gebauer Tony DiCicco Tom Stone |
Tisha Hoch | Rob Stone and Terry Gannon | Heather Mitts |
1999[7] | JP Dellacamera Bob Ley Derek Rae Holly Rowe |
Wendy Gebauer Seamus Malin Amy Allman Ty Keough |
Chris McKendry | Rob Stone and Robin Roberts | ||
1995 | ESPN ESPN2 |
JP Dellacamera | Amy Allman |
- Notes
- 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.[8]
- 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.[9]
Spanish-language television[]
Year | Network | Play-by-play | Color commentator(s) | (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Telemundo NBC Universo Telemundo Deportes |
Marion Reimers | Ana Jurka | |
2019 | Andrés Cantor Erasmo Provenza Diego Pessolano Alejandro Pérez |
Manuel Sol Deyna Castellanos Viviana Vila Eduardo Biscayart Amelia Valverde Mónica González Janelly Farías |
Ana Jurka | |
2015[10] | Andrés Cantor |
Manuel Sol Carlos Hermosillo Andrea Rodebaugh |
||
2011 | Univision Galavision Telefutura |
Andrea Rodebaugh | ||
2007 | Pablo Ramirez | Fátima Leyva | ||
2003 | Jorge Ramos |
English World Feed[]
Year | Site | Play-by-play |
---|---|---|
2019 | Nice & Montpellier Reims, Valenciennes & Nice Paris Le Havre Grenoble, Montpellier, & Lyon Rennes |
Mark Tompkins John Roder Kevin Keatings Gary Bloom Steve Wilson 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 |
South/Central America and American Island Nations[]
America Samoa[]
- 2019– Fox & Telemundo
- 2015– Fox & Telemundo
- 2011– ESPN & ESPN2
Anguilla[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Antigua and Barbuda[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Argentina[]
- 2019- TyC Sports &
- 2015– TyC Sports &
- 2011– TyC Sports &
- 2003- TyC Sports
- 1999- TyC Sports
Aruba[]
- 2019–
Bahamas[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Barbados[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Belize[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Bermuda[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Bolivia[]
- 2019– Bolivisión, Bein Sports &
- 2015- Bolivisión, Tigo Sports, Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
- 2010- Bein Sports &
- 2007- TVP, Red UNO, Bolivisión, Canal 11 & Sportmania
- 2003- TVP, Canal 11, Red UNO, TVP, Bolivisión, Multivisión & Supercanal
- 1999- BT
Brazil[]
Channel | Type | 1991 | 1995 | 1999 | 2003 | 2007 | 2011 | 2015 | 2019 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rede Bandeirantes | Broadcast | – | – | – | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | Yes |
Rede Globo | Broadcast | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 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 |
- 1995 & 1999 - Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana. Rede Bandeirantes is a current member. Rede Globo and SporTV are former members.
British Virgin Islands[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Cayman Islands[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Chile[]
- 2019- Chilevisión, Bein Sports & DirecTV Sports
- 2015– Chilevisión, CDF & DirecTV Sports
- 2011– Bein 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[]
- 2019– Caracol TV, RCN TV, &
- 2015– Caracol TV, RCN TV, &
- 2011– Caracol TV, RCN TV, &
Costa Rica[]
- 2019– Teletica
- 2015– Teletica
- 2011–Teletica
Curacao[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Dominica[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Dominican Republic[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Ecuador[]
- 2019– CNT Sports, DirecTV Sports & RTS
- 2015– CNT & DirecTV Sports
- 2011– , Ecuador TV
El Salvador[]
- 2019– Canales 2, 4, 6
- 2015–
Grenada[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Guadeloupe[]
- 2019– Canal+
Guam[]
- 2011– ESPN & ESPN2
Guatemala[]
- 2019– Televisa
- 2015–
Guyana[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Haiti[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Honduras[]
- 2019– Canal 5
- 2015–
Jamaica[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Martinique[]
- 2019– Canal+
Montserrat[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Nicaragua[]
- 2019– Canal 2 & Canal 10
- 2015–
Panama[]
- 2019– Canal 4 & TVN
- 2015–
Paraguay[]
Peru[]
- 2019– Latina Television&
Puerto Rico[]
- 2019– Fox & Telemundo
- 2015– Fox & Telemundo
- 2011– ESPN & ESPN2
St. Kitts and Nevis[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
St. Lucia[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
St. Vincent[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Suriname[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Trinidad and Tobago[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Turks and Caicos Islands[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
Uruguay[]
US Virgin Islands[]
- 2019–
- 2015–
- 2011– ESPN, & ESPN2
Venezuela[]
- 2019- DirecTV
- 2015– DirecTV
- 2011– Meridiano Televisión, DirecTV
References[]
- ^ 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasters[dead link]
- ^ "BBC launches summer of women's sport season". BBC Media Centre. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
- ^ "World Cup 2015: Women's Football live on the BBC". TV News Room. Retrieved 11 May 2015.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Women's World Cup coverage returns to BBC". Sports Pro Media. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
- ^ "BBC to follow Eng;and at the Women's World Cup". Digital Spy. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
- ^ "BBC Sport – Fifa Women's World Cup Finals". Sports Pro Media. Retrieved 25 August 2007.
- ^ Jones, Grahame L. (16 June 1999). "All 32 Games Will Be Televised". LA Times. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
- ^ "Women's World Cup gets whopping ESPN TV rating". USA Today. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
- ^ "FIFA women's World Cup TV ratings for U.S. vs. Japan a smash hit". The Denver Post. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
- ^ "NBC DEPORTES ANNOUNCES ROSTER OF ON-AIR TALENT FOR 2015 FIFA WORLD CUP EVENTS". NBC Universal Media Village. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
Categories:
- FIFA Women's World Cup
- Association football on television
- Lists of association football broadcasters
- ABC Sports
- BBC Sport
- NBC Deportes
- ESPN announcers
- ESPN2
- Fox Sports
- Fox Sports 1
- SportsChannel
- Sportsnet
- FIFA Women's World Cup-related lists