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Women’s World Cup Power Rankings: Why Each Quarterfinalist Could Win, Lose

There’s a new No. 1 in our latest rankings as we look at the strengths and weaknesses of the eight remaining teams.

Very little of the 2023 Women’s World Cup has lived up to the expectations many had before it began.

For starters, the U.S. women’s national team made its earliest exit instead of gunning for a three-peat; powerhouses like Germany, Brazil and Canada crashed out before the knockouts; and World Cup debutant Morocco made its way into the round of 16.

But one expectation this tournament has lived up to is that this would be the most competitive Women’s World Cup yet. The worries of expanding to 32 teams too soon have been erased as competition has been fierce, and new contenders have emerged.

Going into the quarterfinals, that still holds true. Colombia is making its deepest run, France has finally returned to the quarterfinals after crashing out early in the past two World Cups and Japan has surprised the world as the most complete team so far.

In the spirit of the unpredictability this tournament has embodied, here is why each team could win the World Cup and why each team could lose in our latest power rankings.