Scotland at the FIFA Women's World Cup

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The Scotland women's national football team has represented Scotland at the FIFA Women's World Cup on one occasion, in 2019.[1] Scotland is set to co-host the 2035 tournament along with the three other countries in the United Kingdom, earning the team automatic qualification as co-host.

World Cup Finals
Year Result GP W D* L GF GA GD
1991Did not enter
1995Did not qualify
1999Unable to qualify[2]
2003
2007Did not qualify
2011
2015
2019Group stage301257–2
2023Did not qualify
2027To be determined
2031
2035 Qualified as co-host
Total2/12301257–2
FIFA Women's World Cup history
YearRoundDateOpponentResultStadium
2019 Group stage9 June EnglandL 1–2Allianz Riviera, Nice
14 June JapanL 1–2Roazhon Park, Rennes
19 June ArgentinaD 3–3Parc des Princes, Paris

2019 FIFA Women's World Cup

Scotland, 20th in the March 2019 FIFA World Rankings,[3] qualified for their first World Cup after finishing top of UEFA Group 2 ahead of Switzerland and Poland.[4] At the draw for the finals held in France, they were placed in Group D alongside rivals England (ranked 3rd in the world, who had beaten an under-strength Scottish team 6–0 at the 2017 European Championship),[5] Japan (ranked 7th, who won the tournament in 2011 and reached the final in 2015), and Argentina (ranked 37th, who had lost all six of their previous World Cup finals matches).

All three group matches saw the use of the newly introduced Video Assistant Referee (VAR) system feature prominently. In the opening match against England in Nice, a penalty kick was awarded against Scotland for accidental handball after a VAR review.[6] This was converted, and England dominated play and scored again before half time.[6] Scotland improved in the second half and scored a goal late on through Claire Emslie, but could not find an equaliser.[6]

The second match against Japan in Rennes followed a similar pattern; this time the opponents took the lead in open play, then scored a penalty awarded via VAR for a foul to deservedly lead by two at the interval.[7] Scotland created more in the second half and appeared to have two reasonable penalty claims in incidents involving Erin Cuthbert (a foul and handball), but no VAR reviews were carried out.[7] Substitute Lana Clelland scored a fine goal with two minutes remaining, but a 2–1 defeat was again the final outcome.[7]

Four third-place teams would qualify for the knockout rounds, and other results meant that either Scotland or Argentina would be likely to progress if they won their meeting in Paris. The Scots took the lead through Kim Little, and were 3–0 up with 21 minutes remaining after further goals from Jen Beattie and Cuthbert.[8] Argentina quickly pulled two goals back, the second rebounding in off goalkeeper Lee Alexander after hitting the crossbar.[8] With four minutes to go, Argentina were awarded a penalty for a foul challenge after a lengthy VAR review. Alexander saved the shot, but it was ordered to be re-taken when VAR indicated she had moved slightly off her line before it was struck; Argentina scored with the second attempt, with the goal timed at 94 minutes.[8] Despite the delays, little further stoppage time was played and the match ended with the final score 3–3, eliminating both teams, with the fact Scotland had gained their first World Cup point providing no consolation in the dramatic circumstances.[8]

Group D

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  England 3 3 0 0 5 1 +4 9 Advance to knockout stage
2  Japan 3 1 1 1 2 3 1 4
3  Argentina 3 0 2 1 3 4 1 2
4  Scotland 3 0 1 2 5 7 2 1
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
England 2–1 Scotland
Report
Japan 2–1 Scotland
Report
Attendance: 13,201[10]
Scotland 3–3 Argentina
Report
Attendance: 28,205[11]

2035 FIFA Women's World Cup

Scotland is set to co-host the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2035 which will mark their second appearance. They also automatically qualified as co-host.

Goalscorers

References

Head-to-head record

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