Enjoy your complete guide to the tournament, including a free wall chart.
Is every summer a Great Summer of Sport? It must feel like that sometimes, especially to those television viewers who have never thrilled to the smell of liniment and the roar of the crowd. And the summer of 2023 is no different, what with Wimbledon reaching its climax and another football World Cup on the way.
For the next three and a half weeks the Women’s World Cup will play a central part in the television schedules as European champions England head Down Under to take on the world’s best.
This marks a watershed moment. Four years ago the Women’s World Cup passed off in France without too many beyond the hardcore fans noticing there was a major international tournament on, even as England made it as far as the semi-finals.
The TV coverage that existed was tucked away on the BBC, found either via the red button or on iPlayer. Now, as the Lionesses prepare to do their stuff on the other side of the world, their games will be watched by millions of fans on the BBC and ITV, despite it being barely past breakfast time.
Pick up the special Women’s World Cup issue of Radio Times magazine – out now – for a full preview to the tournament.
Also in this week’s Radio Times:
- Comedian and writer Rosie Jones discusses why she’s chosen to use the R-word in her documentary, and in her authored piece for Radio Times, why ableism should be treated as seriously as other forms of prejudice
- Veteran actor Timothy Spall chats about loneliness, his battle with acute myeloid leukaemia and his son’s acting career
- Aidan Turner on faking it in his role as a tennis coach in Fifteen-Love, the #MeToo movement and why he is happy to have a supporting role in upcoming series Rivals
The Women’s World Cup 2023 runs from Thursday 20th July to Sunday 20th August.
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