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A sell-out final and more bumper TV ratings have capped the biggest and most successful Women’s World Cup to date.<\/p>\n
The tournament fell just short of two million attendees and, helped by the Matildas’ golden run to the semi-final, captivated Australia.<\/p>\n
Another full house of 75,784 for the Spain-England final at Stadium Australia topped it off, bringing the end tally to 1,978,274 – and average crowds for the tournament to 30,911.<\/p>\n
The total attendees exceeded FIFA’s initial targets and projections by more than 500,000.<\/p>\n
Sunday night’s final reached 5.54 million people via broadcaster Channel Seven alone and had an average audience of 3.08 million.<\/p>\n
The broadcaster confirmed 18.6 million people watched the tournament across their platforms.<\/p>\n
The Matildas’ semi-final loss to England last Wednesday broke new ground.<\/p>\n
The match was the most-watched TV program in more than two decades, with an average audience of 7.2 million and a reach of 11.15 million – which didn’t include viewers on partner Optus Sport.<\/p>\n
Seven confirmed it was also the most streamed event in Australian history, with 957,000 viewers on 7plus.<\/p>\n
The decision to expand the competition from 24 to 32 teams proved a raging success.<\/p>\n
Spain and England were first-time finalists while Australia reached the last four for the first time.<\/p>\n
Colombia’s run to the quarter-finals was one of the stories of the tournament, while Morocco broke new ground, becoming the first Arab and majority-Muslim nation to qualify for the finals, then reaching the knockout stage.<\/p>\n
Traditional heavyweights Germany, Norway and the USA, who have won seven of the eight World Cup titles between them, failed to progress past the round of 16.<\/p>\n
There were also far fewer of the thrashings that have marred previous Women’s World Cups, with debutants like Morocco and Haiti impressing on the big stage.<\/p>\n
There were 164 goals scored across the expanded tournament, surpassing the previous highest of 146 recorded at Canada 2015 and France 2019.<\/p>\n
The World Cup also delivered financially.<\/p>\n
Last week, FIFA president Gianni Infantino said the tournament had brought in more than $US570 million ($A887 million) in revenue, breaking even for the first time.<\/p>\n
“This World Cup generated over $US570m in revenues, and so we broke even,” he said at the FIFA Women’s Football Convention in Sydney on Friday.<\/p>\n
“We didn’t lose any money and we generated the second-highest income of any sport, besides of course the men’s World Cup, at a global stage.”<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n