Women's World Cup 2023 Group B table, standings, schedule and fixtures

Patrick Brischetto

Women's World Cup 2023 Group B table, standings, schedule and fixtures image

Considered by many to be the Group of Death at the 2023 Women's World Cup, Group B has been one of the most interesting of the tournament, with co-hosts Australia pitted against reigning Olympic gold medalists Canada, World Cup debutants Republic of Ireland, and a strong African side in Nigeria.

Australia, backed by capacity crowds at all of their games and on a hot run of form, eventually progressed after defeating Canada 4-0 on the final match day as they showcased their quality when it mattered most. 

Canada themselves disappointed as they became the first Olympic champions to be knocked out of the group stage of the Women's World Cup. Nigeria pounced on their poor form to finish runners-up in Group B as a result.

Meanwhile, Republic of Ireland finished bottom of their group but managed a 0-0 draw with Nigeria to pick up their first ever World Cup point. 

MORE: Australia final 23-player World Cup squad

Group B standings and schedule

Women's World Cup Group B table & fixtures

Team PTS GP W L D GF GA GD
1. Australia (Q) 6 3 2 0 1 7 3 +4
2. Nigeria (Q) 5 3 1 0 2 3 2 +1
3. Canada 3 3 1 1 1 3 7 -4
4. Rep. of Ireland (E) 1 3 0 2 1 1 3 -2

*(E) - Eliminated from the World Cup

The four teams selected are playing a round-robin format with each nation facing the other three. Group standings are based on points from those three group-stage matches — three points for a win, one for a draw, none for a loss. 

The top two teams from each group based on total points advance to the single-game knockouts. If teams are tied on points, overall goal difference is the first tiebreaker followed by overall goals scored. If teams are also tied in those categories another set of tiebreakers is applied. 

Group B match schedule

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Thu, July 20 Australia 1-0 Rep. of Ireland Highlights   Sydney (AUS)
Fri, July 21 Nigeria 0-0 Canada HIghlights   Melbourne (AUS)
Wed, July 26 Canada 2-1 Rep. of Ireland Highlights   Perth (AUS)
Thu, July 27 Australia 2-3 Nigeria Highlights   Brisbane (AUS)
Mon, July 31 Canada 0-4 Australia - 6 a.m. Melbourne (AUS)
Mon, July 31 Rep. of Ireland 0-0 Nigeria - 6 a.m. Brisbane (AUS)

Who will win Group B?

Heading into the final matchday, it's Nigeria who are the surprise favorites given they sit atop the group on goal difference ahead of Canada.

Australia topping Group B is considered the least likely scenario, according to the betting market.

  Australia Canada Republic of Ireland Nigeria
BetMGM (USA) +300 +220 -125
Sports Interaction (Canada) 3.91 3.01 1.88
SkyBet (UK) 11/4 2/1 1/1
Dafabet (India)
Unibet (Australia) 3.75 3.10 1.91

Odds updated as of July 31

Who will qualify from Group B

Nigeria and Canada are seen as the favourites to advance, though Australia have a chance to flip the script in front of their home fans on the final day.

A victory against Canada would see Australia leap past the Canadians and potentially even win the group depending on what Nigeria can do against a plucky Irish side that has nothing to play for but pride.

  Australia Canada Republic of Ireland Nigeria
BetMGM (USA) -120 -165 -5000
Sports Interaction (Canada) 1.80 1.50 1.14
SkyBet (UK) 1/1 4/7 1/16
Dafabet (India)
Unibet (Australia) 1.80 1.50 1.13

Odds updated as of July 31

Potential path to final for Group B teams

The teams that progress from Group B will then face either the winners or runners-up of Group D, a group that features Euro 2022 champions England, Denmark, Haiti and China.

England are heavily backed to finish top of the group despite injury issues, with China and Denmark predicted to fight it out for the second qualifying spot.

Women's World Cup Round of 16

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Sat, Aug. 5 1A vs. 2C 15:00 01:00 Auckland (NZL)
Sat, Aug. 5 1C vs. 2A 18:00 04:00 Wellington (NZL)
Sun, Aug. 6 1E vs. 2G 12:00 22:00
(Aug. 5)
Sydney (AUS)
Sun, Aug. 6 1G vs. 2E 19:00 05:00 Melbourne (AUS)
Mon, Aug. 7 1D vs. 2B 17:30 03:30 Brisbane (AUS)
Mon, Aug. 7 1B vs. 2D 20:30 06:30 Sydney (AUS)
Tue, Aug. 8 1H vs. 2F 18:00 04:00 Melbourne (AUS)
Tue, Aug. 8 1F vs. 2H 20:30 07:00 Adelaide (AUS)

Women's World Cup Quarterfinals

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Fri, Aug. 11 QF1: 1A/2C vs. 1E/2G 11:00 21:00
(Aug. 10)
Wellington (NZL)
Fri, Aug. 11 QF2: 1C/2A vs. 1G/2E 17:30 03:30 Auckland (NZL)
Sat, Aug. 12 QF3: 1B/2D vs. 1F/2H 17:00 03:00 Brisbane (AUS)
Sat, Aug. 12 QF4: 1D/2B vs. 1H/2F 20:30 06:30 Sydney (AUS)

Women's World Cup Semifinals

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Tue, Aug. 15 QF1 vs. QF2 18:00 04:00 Auckland (NZL)
Wed, Aug. 16 QF3 vs. QF4 20:00 06:00 Sydney (AUS)

Women's World Cup 3rd Place

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Sat, Aug. 19 Semifinal losers 18:00 04:00 Brisbane (AUS)

Women's World Cup Final

Date Match Time
(AEST)
Time
(ET)
City
Sun, Aug. 20 Semifinal winners 20:00 06:00 Sydney (AUS)

Patrick Brischetto

Patrick Brischetto Photo

Patrick is a journalist currently based in Sydney who covered the 2022 FIFA World Cup and 2023 Women's World Cup for The Sporting News. He also holds a position at the Western Sydney Wanderers FC, and is slowly attempting to convince the world that the A-League is the greatest sporting competition.