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Bring It On

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56-703: Bring It On may refer to: Books [ edit ] Bring It On (book) , by Pat Robertson Bring It On! (manhwa) , a romance manhwa by Baek Hye-Kyung Film and stage [ edit ] Bring It On (film series) , an American series of teen comedy cheerleading films capitalizing on the success of the initial film Bring It On (2000), directed by Peyton Reed Bring It On Again (2004) directed by Damon Santostefano Bring It On: All or Nothing (2006) directed by Steve Rash Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007) directed by Steve Rash Bring It On: Fight to

112-446: A 1997 album by Leadfoot Bring It On , a 2006 album by Goose Bring It On , a 2006 album by Jon Eberson Bring It On: The Best of Jay-Z , a 2003 compilation album See also [ edit ] Bring It (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Bring It On . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

168-503: A 2004 single by Alistair Griffin "Bring It On" (Godsmack song) , from the 2006 album Madden NFL 06:Soundtrack "Bring It On" (Hard-Fi song) , from the 2011 album Killer Sounds "Bring It On" (Lenny Kravitz song) , from the 2007 album It Is Time for a Love Revolution "Bring It On" (YoungBoy Never Broke Again song) "Bring It On", a 1993 song on the Geto Boys album Till Death Do Us Part "Bring It On", by Seal from

224-748: A 2023 song by Dallas Smith from the album Dallas Smith "BRING IT ON", a 2023 song by Tones & I , BIA and Diarra Sylla which was the official walk-out track of the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup " Bring It On...Bring It On ", a 1983 song by James Brown Albums [ edit ] Bring It On (Gomez album) , 1998 Bring It On (Keith Harling album) , 1999 Bring It On (Alistair Griffin album) , 2004 Bring It On (Kevin Fowler album) , 2007 Bring It On! (Machine Gun Fellatio album) , 2000 Bring It On! (HorrorPops album) , 2005 Bring It On (Kaci Battaglia album) , 2010 Bring It On! (James Brown album) , 1983 Bring It On ,

280-411: A declaration of interest, while the completed bidding registration of new member associations and re-confirmation of prior bidders was due by 2 September. Nine countries initially indicated interest in hosting the events: Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Japan, South Korea (with interest in a joint bid with North Korea), New Zealand and South Africa. Belgium expressed interest in hosting

336-548: A greater opportunity to qualify for the final tournament. This fostered the growing reach and professionalisation of the women's game. On 31 July, the FIFA Council unanimously decided to expand the tournament to 32 teams, featuring eight groups of four. The astounding success of this year's FIFA Women's World Cup in France made it very clear that this is the time to keep the momentum going and take concrete steps to foster

392-400: A letter signed by players from around the world to FIFA, challenging FIFA to make prize money in the men's and women's tournaments equal and to ensure at least 30% of prize money in the women's tournament made it to the players. While FIFA did not match the prize money of the men's tournament, it did significantly increase it, with more than half set to be paid to players directly. Just before

448-415: A preliminary squad of between 35 and 55 players, which FIFA did not publish. From the preliminary squad, each team had to name a final squad of 23 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by 9 July 2023. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match. The final draw took place at

504-735: A retired international representing them as a draw assistant: Maia Jackman of New Zealand for the OFC and Julie Dolan of Australia for the AFC, alongside men's internationals Ian Wright of England for UEFA, Alexi Lalas of the United States for CONCACAF, Geremi of Cameroon for the CAF and 2002 World Cup winner Gilberto Silva of Brazil for CONMEBOL. Snowboarding Olympic gold medalist Zoi Sadowski-Synnott of New Zealand and four-time swimming Olympic gold medalist Cate Campbell of Australia also assisted

560-536: The Aotea Centre in Auckland , New Zealand, on 22 October 2022 at 19:30 NZDT ( UTC+13 ), prior to the completion of qualification . The three winners of the inter-confederation play-off were not known at the time of the draw. Retired American international and two-time Women's World Cup winner Carli Lloyd and CNN International sports presenter Amanda Davies conducted the draw. Each confederation had

616-568: The CONCACAF W Championship . The Chadian and Pakistani football associations were suspended by FIFA, thus excluding them from entering qualifications. Rwanda , Sudan , DR Congo and São Tomé and Príncipe entered qualification but withdrew later. Kenya withdrew before the second round of qualifiers. North Korea and Turkmenistan withdrew from the Women's Asian Cup qualifiers due to safety concerns and travel restrictions related to

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672-550: The COVID-19 pandemic . Iraq withdrew after the AFC draw. Due to the uncertainty of women's sport after the Taliban takeover of the country , Afghanistan withdrew from qualification. Due to COVID-19 pandemic outbreaks in their squads, Women's Asian Cup hosts India withdrew from qualification. American Samoa withdrew due to continuing difficulties related to the pandemic. Russia were disqualified from competing due to

728-555: The Golden Glove , awarded to the best-performing goalkeeper of the tournament. Of the eight teams making their first appearance, Morocco were the only one to advance to the round of 16 (where they lost to France ; coincidentally, the result of this fixture was similar to the men's World Cup in Qatar , where France defeated Morocco in the semi-final). The United States were the two-time defending champions, but were eliminated in

784-585: The Russian invasion of Ukraine . The allocation of slots for each confederation was confirmed by the FIFA Council on 25 December 2020. The slots for the two host nations were taken directly from the quotas allocated to their confederations. A ten-team play-off tournament decided the final three spots at the Women's World Cup. The play-off slot allocation was as follows: Of the 32 nations qualified for

840-501: The most watched television broadcast in Australian history, with an average viewership of 7.13 million and a peak viewership of 11.15 million viewers. It was the most attended edition of the competition ever held. The FIFA Women's World Cup is a professional association football (soccer) tournament contested by senior women's national football teams, organised by FIFA . The tournament, held every four years and one year after

896-491: The 1994 album Seal "Bring It On", a 1996 song by Jay-Z from the album Reasonable Doubt "Bring It On", a 1997 single by Lynyrd Skynyrd from the album Twenty "Bring It On", a 1997 song by the Jungle Brothers from the album Raw Deluxe "Bring It On", a 1998 single by N'Dea Davenport "Bring It On", by Gomez from their 1999 album Liquid Skin "Bring It On", a 2000 song by Billie Piper from

952-416: The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup on 19 February 2019. Member associations interested in hosting the tournament had to submit a declaration of interest by 15 March, and provide the completed bidding registration by 16 April. However, FIFA revised the bidding timeline as the tournament expanded to 32 teams on 31 July. Other member associations interested in hosting the tournament then had until 16 August to submit

1008-710: The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, 20 countries competed at the previous tournament in 2019. Haiti , Morocco , Panama , the Philippines , Portugal , the Republic of Ireland , Vietnam and Zambia made their debuts at the FIFA Women's World Cup. This World Cup was the first FIFA tournament the Philippines played in. This was Panama, Portugal and Vietnam's first FIFA women's competition, having only taken part in various FIFA men's tournaments. Zambia made history as

1064-570: The 2023 tournament. Iceland was the highest ranked team in the FIFA Women's World Rankings that failed to qualify, ranked 16th at the time. Zambia were the lowest ranked team to qualify, ranked 81st at the time. The qualified teams, listed by region, with numbers in parentheses indicating final positions in the FIFA Women's World Ranking before the tournament were: AFC (6) CAF (4) CONCACAF (6) CONMEBOL (3) OFC (1) UEFA (12) Each team had to provide to FIFA

1120-460: The 33 referees, FIFA included 2 each from Australia, Canada, South Korea, and the United States. France's Stéphanie Frappart , Salima Mukansanga from Rwanda, and Yoshimi Yamashita from Japan, who became the first female referees to officiate the men's World Cup in 2022, were among those selected for the Women's World Cup. They were also joined by female assistant referees Neuza Back, Kathryn Nesbitt, and Karen Díaz Medina, who also participated at

1176-526: The Finish (2009) directed by Bille Woodruff Bring It On: Worldwide Cheersmack (2017) directed by Robert Adetuyi Bring It On: Cheer or Die (2022) directed by Karen Lam "Bring It On", an episode of the Canadian TV series 6teen Bring It On: The Musical , a musical with music by Tom Kitt and Lin-Manuel Miranda Music [ edit ] "Bring It On" (Alistair Griffin song) ,

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1232-646: The Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.236 via cp1112 cp1112, Varnish XID 949294374 Upstream caches: cp1112 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 08:31:13 GMT 2023 FIFA Women%27s World Cup The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup was the ninth edition of the FIFA Women's World Cup , the quadrennial international women's football championship contested by women's national teams and organised by FIFA . The tournament, which took place from 20 July to 20 August 2023,

1288-476: The Women's World Cup from 24 to 32 teams, starting with the 2023 edition, and doubling the tournament's prize money. The proposal came following the success of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup and the prior edition of the tournament in 2015 , which after increasing from 16 to 24 teams set an attendance record for all FIFA competitions besides the men's FIFA World Cup. Expanding the tournament to allow eight additional participating teams gave more member associations

1344-605: The Women's World Cup while co-host Australia achieved their best placing yet, finishing fourth. Japanese player Hinata Miyazawa won the Golden Boot scoring five goals throughout the tournament. Spanish player Aitana Bonmatí was voted the tournament's best player, winning the Golden Ball , whilst Bonmatí's teammate Salma Paralluelo was awarded the Young Player Award . England goalkeeper Mary Earps won

1400-621: The album Walk of Life "Bring It On", by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds from the 2003 album Nocturama "Bring It On", a 2007 single by Goose "Bring It On", by Daddy Yankee from the 2007 album El Cartel: The Big Boss "Bring It On", a 2009 single by The Chipmunks from the album Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack "Bring It On", a 2022 song by Oneus "Bring It On",

1456-470: The bid to host the Women's World Cup. The decision came after a vote by the FIFA Council , with the winning bid earning 22 votes, while Colombia earned 13. Neither country had previously hosted a senior FIFA tournament. This was the first Women's World Cup to be hosted in multiple countries, and only the second World Cup tournament to do so, following the 2002 FIFA World Cup , held in Japan and South Korea. It

1512-527: The competition proposed for. Most stadiums featured in the bid were planned to have minor renovations with new floodlighting, pitch renovations, in addition to gender-neutral changing rooms in time for the tournament. On 31 March 2021, FIFA announced the final host city and venue selections. Five cities and six stadiums were used in Australia, along with four cities and stadiums in New Zealand. From

1568-433: The draw. For the draw, the 32 teams were allocated into four pots based on the FIFA Women's World Rankings of 13 October 2022. Pot one contained both co-hosts New Zealand and Australia (both automatically placed in positions A1 and B1, respectively) along with the best six teams. Pot two contained the next best eight teams, with the next best eight teams being allocated into the following pot (pot three). Pot four contained

1624-549: The exception of UEFA which organised its own qualifying competition . Australia and New Zealand, as co-hosts, qualified automatically for the tournament, leaving the remaining 207 FIFA member associations eligible to enter qualification if they chose to do so. Australia competed at the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup , whilst New Zealand did not enter the OFC Women's Nations Cup the same year. The reigning Women's World Cup champions United States competed in qualification through

1680-573: The final . It was the first time a European nation had won the Women's World Cup since 2007 and Spain's first title, although their victory was marred by the Rubiales affair . Spain became the second nation to win both the women's and men's World Cup since Germany in the 2003 edition . In addition, they became the first nation to concurrently hold the FIFA women's U-17 , U-20 , and senior World Cups. Sweden would claim their fourth bronze medal at

1736-401: The final at Stadium Australia. There were two opening ceremonies, one before each kick-off game in the two host nations on 20 July 2023. The first took place at Eden Park , Auckland , ahead of the opening game of the competition between New Zealand and Norway. The ceremonies both featured indigenous welcomes, fireworks, dancing and live music, before a moment of silence. A few hours before

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1792-467: The final draw. The opening match of the tournament, between co-host New Zealand and Norway, was played on 20 July 2023 at Eden Park . The inaugural match played in Australia, was between Australia playing against the Republic of Ireland on the same day at Stadium Australia , after a venue change due to strong ticketing demand. The total prize pool was USD 110 million, $ 80 million greater than

1848-487: The first landlocked country in Africa to qualify for a World Cup for either sex. Morocco became the first-ever Arab country to qualify for the Women's World Cup, while the Republic of Ireland marked their debut at any senior women's tournament. Denmark made their first appearance in 16 years after missing three consecutive tournaments, their last appearance being in 2007 . Costa Rica , Colombia and Switzerland returned to

1904-457: The first time since the 2002 FIFA World Cup , both qualified teams from each group were kept on the same side of the draw in the knockout stage, meaning they could potentially meet again in the semi-final. This was to minimise travel between Australia and New Zealand and to ensure both host nations remained in their own country up to the semi-finals should they qualify. Australia and New Zealand proposed 13 possible venues across 12 host cities for

1960-427: The growth of women's football. I am glad to see this proposal becoming a reality. The tournament opened with a group stage consisting of eight groups of four teams, with the top two teams progressing from each group to a knockout tournament featuring 16 teams. The number of games played overall increased from 52 to 64. The tournament replicated the format of the men's FIFA World Cup used between 1998 and 2022 . For

2016-560: The hotels and training sites for the 29 qualified participating nations on 11 December 2022, with the remaining 3 qualified teams selecting their base camps after the Play-off Tournament. FIFA later confirmed the last remaining three base camps for the play-off tournament winners on 21 March 2023. It was the first World Cup to have dedicated base camps for the 32 participating nations. FIFA's confederations organised their qualifications through continental championships , with

2072-418: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bring_It_On&oldid=1193129993 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Bring It On (book) Too Many Requests If you report this error to

2128-476: The lowest ranked teams, along with the placeholders for the three inter-confederation play-off winners. With the exception of UEFA, teams from the same confederation could not be drawn in the same group. However, since each inter-confederation play-off group contained multiple confederations, the placeholders were identified by the seeded teams in their respective play-off pathways to avoid any draw constraints. The draw started with pot one and ended with pot four, with

2184-632: The men's World Cup, was first played in 1991 in China, and was expanded to 32 teams beginning with the 2023 edition. The tournament is contested with eight round-robin groups followed by a knockout round for 16 teams. The defending champions were the United States , who defeated the Netherlands 2–0 in the 2019 final . The event took place over a period of a month, from 20 July to 20 August, in Australia and New Zealand. This Women's World Cup

2240-499: The men's tournament. Heba Saadieh became the first Palestinian and Arab female referee to officiate at a World Cup of either gender. Firas Abu Hilal, secretary general of the Palestinian Football Association labelled Saadia as "a role model for Palestinian women who aspire to achieve success and greatness" and that she "has proven the ability of Palestinian women to excel in any field". The VAR at

2296-529: The original owners of the land". They were: Tarntanya (Adelaide), Meanjin (written as Meaanjin; Brisbane), Naarm (Melbourne), Boorloo (Perth), Gadigal (Eastern Sydney; for Sydney Football Stadium), Wangal (Western Sydney; for Stadium Australia), Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland), Ōtepoti (Dunedin), Kirikiriroa (Hamilton), and Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington). Eden Park , Auckland hosted New Zealand's opening match; Stadium Australia , Sydney hosted Australia's opening match (both group stages). Lang Park , Brisbane, hosted

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2352-476: The prize pool of the previous tournament . At previous tournaments, FIFA paid total prize money to the national associations, but for the 2023 Women's World Cup it was set to award prize payments directly to players as well as the associations. This came as a result of reports in the women's game that a number of national associations were withholding competition prize money from players and/or not paying them at all. In March 2023, global player union FIFPRO sent

2408-534: The proposed venues, Newcastle and Launceston were not selected in Australia and Christchurch was omitted in New Zealand. Eden Park in Auckland hosted the opening game, with Stadium Australia in Sydney hosting the final match. As a part of the branding, all cities used native names ( Indigenous in Australia and Māori in New Zealand) alongside their English names in an effort to "reconcile and respect

2464-543: The round of 16 by Sweden, the first time the team had not made the semi-finals at the tournament, and the first time the defending champions failed to progress to the quarter-finals. Australia 's team, nicknamed the Matildas, performed better than expected, and the event saw many Australians unite to support them . The Matildas, who beat France to make the semi-finals for the first time, saw record numbers of fans watching their games, their 3–1 loss to England becoming

2520-488: The team selected being allocated to the first available group alphabetically. Pot 1 teams were automatically drawn to position 1 of each group, with the following positions drawn for the remaining pots. The pots for the draws are shown below. In January 2023, the FIFA Referees Committee announced the list of 33 referees, 55 assistant referees, and 19 video assistant referees (VAR) for the tournament. Of

2576-503: The third-place match on 19 August; Stadium Australia hosted the final which was held on 20 August. The Women's World Cup forced many domestic Australian sporting teams to move matches from grounds under the FIFA lockout, particularly those in the National Rugby League . Team base camps Base camps were used by the 32 national squads to stay and train before and during the Women's World Cup tournament. FIFA announced

2632-416: The tournament after missing the previous one in 2019 . Italy qualified for two consecutive women's World Cups for the first time in their history, after three sporadic appearances in 1991, 1999 and 2019. Africa had four representatives for the first time in the competition's history. Thailand , Cameroon , Chile , and Scotland , all of whom qualified for the 2019 Women's World Cup, did not qualify for

2688-552: The tournament following the new deadline but later dropped out, as did Bolivia, in September 2019. Australia and New Zealand later announced they would merge their bids in a joint submission. Brazil , Colombia , and Japan joined them in submitting their bid books to FIFA by 13 December. However, both Brazil and Japan later withdrew their bids in June 2020 before the final voting. On 25 June 2020, Australia and New Zealand won

2744-453: The tournament had the spoken explanations broadcast in the stadium and on television as part of a year-long trial of the technique intended to give more transparency to often-controversial decisions. Other sports with video referees already used the measure, with FIFA also having implemented it at the 2022 FIFA Club World Cup and 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup . On 18 August 2023, FIFA announced that American referee Tori Penso would adjudicate

2800-476: The tournament in the bid book submitted to FIFA, suggesting a minimum of 10 stadiums be used—5 in each country. The original proposal of the joint bid would have seen the venues divided into three main travel hubs: South Hub, containing Perth, Adelaide, Launceston and Melbourne; East Hub, containing Brisbane, Newcastle, Sydney, Melbourne and Launceston; and New Zealand Hub, containing Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin. The Sydney Football Stadium

2856-567: The tournament, FIFA president Gianni Infantino announced that the player payments would still be paid to the associations, and that FIFA planned to audit the associations to make sure the money got to the players. Football administrator Lise Klaveness expressed concern over what she felt sounded like reneging on the promise, both for the players and for FIFA's credibility. During the tournament, Infantino admitted that FIFA had simply made recommendations to associations on how much to pay players, and they could not reasonably check. Bidding began for

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2912-669: Was also the first FIFA Women's World Cup to be held in the Southern Hemisphere , the first senior FIFA tournament to be held in Oceania , and the first FIFA tournament to be hosted across multiple confederations (with Australia in the AFC and New Zealand in the OFC ). Australia became the second association from the AFC to host the Women's World Cup, after China in both 1991 and 2007 . In July 2019, Infantino proposed an expansion of

2968-510: Was jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand . It was the first FIFA Women's World Cup with more than one host nation, as well as the first World Cup to be held across multiple confederations , as Australia is in the Asian confederation , while New Zealand is in the Oceanian confederation . It was also the first Women's World Cup to be held in the Southern Hemisphere . This tournament

3024-515: Was the first co-hosted tournament, and also the first senior World Cup to be held across multiple confederations. In addition, it was the first senior tournament to be held in Oceania , the first Women's World Cup in the Southern Hemisphere , and the third to be held in the Asia-Pacific region, after 1991 and 2007 . The match schedule was announced by FIFA on 1 December 2021, with kick-off times confirmed on 24 October 2022, two days after

3080-422: Was the first to feature an expanded format of 32 teams from the previous 24, replicating the format used for the men's World Cup from 1998 to 2022 . The opening match was won by co-host New Zealand , beating Norway at Eden Park in Auckland on 20 July 2023 and achieving their first Women's World Cup victory. Spain were crowned champions after defeating reigning European champions England 1–0 in

3136-441: Was the only new stadium, undergoing a major renovation during the bid period, replacing the old football stadium on the same site and opening on 28 August 2022. The bid evaluation was released on 10 June 2020 by FIFA, which noted that the majority of the stadiums listed in the bid meet FIFA's hosting requirements with capacity, aside from Adelaide and Auckland, which did not meet the minimum requirements capacity wise for stages of

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