Skip to main content

Women’s World Cup Power Rankings: How Far Has the USWNT Fallen?

Several powerhouses have been eliminated. A debutant finds its way to the round of 16. And the U.S. no longer looks like a two-time defending champion. The mayhem is well underway Down Under.

When the world of women’s soccer ventured to Australia and New Zealand, putting itself in time zones ahead of most of the globe, we were prepared for lots of mental math and wacky start times. These teams were playing tomorrow, for us, today.

While the 2023 Women’s World Cup is being played in the future in a literal sense relative to our clocks back in the U.S., it also started to seem like there was a break in the time-space continuum as the tournament unfolded. Has the future of women’s soccer somehow time-traveled to our TV screens to surprise us all?

For those who have been paying attention all along, this is no glitch in the matrix. Women’s soccer has not flipped upside down since going Down Under. Countries around the world have finally started investing in a real way, and while there is still progress to be made, the future of the sport is here. And now we get to watch it unfold in a beautifully chaotic way.

CHAOS RANKED: A graphic of USWNT's Lindsey Horan, Australia's Sam Kerr, France's Wendie Renard, Spain's Alexia Putellas, England's Lauren James, Japan's Hinata Miyazawa and Colombia's Linda Caicedo.

This tournament was always going to be more competitive than World Cups of the past. But the mayhem that has unfolded these past two weeks has far outlived expectations. Canada, the reigning Olympic gold medalist, is already back in the Northern Hemisphere. Brazil, hoping to send off legend Marta on a high note in her sixth and final World Cup, failed to make it to the round of 16 for the first time since 1995. Germany, a two-time World Cup winner and longtime powerhouse of the sport, failed to qualify for the knockout stage for the first time, leading the way for debutant Morocco to get a spot in the round of 16.

And, probably most shocking of all, the U.S. women’s national team—which entered the World Cup as the heavy favorites—barely snuck into the knockout stage, finishing group play with just one win for the first time. While the rest of the world certainly seems to be catching up, a hobbled USWNT has stumbled. A typically poised squad used to setting the pace is watching its students try to outdo the master.

But if you think the pandemonium has reached its peak, don’t get too comfortable. The unpredictable group finishes have set up an intriguing round of 16, pitting some of the world’s best against each far earlier in the bracket than many predicted and also giving the underdogs a chance at making some deep runs. Keeping in mind both group play and what each team’s path to the final looks like, here is a feeble attempt at making sense of it all and aligning the threads of the future in our round-of-16 power rankings.