Where to watch France vs Brazil in Women's World Cup 2023: Live stream, TV channel, lineups and odds

Patrick Brischetto

Where to watch France vs Brazil in Women's World Cup 2023: Live stream, TV channel, lineups and odds image

One of the most highly anticipated matches of the group stages will be seen in Group F, as heavyweights France and Brazil battle it out at Brisbane Stadium.

Brazil were one of the top performers in the first round of matches, as an Ary Borges hat-trick helped them to a 4-0 win over debutants Panama in Adelaide.

France on the other hand struggled against Jamaica, lacking a threat up front and being held to a 0-0 draw, and now have injury concerns facing talismanic captain Wendie Renard.

Fans from around the world will be tuning into this one, with two superstar sides fighting it out to have the best chance of topping Group F and avoiding a potential Round of 16 matchup with Germany.

MORE: Group F fixtures, results, standings

What time is France vs Brazil?

This hugely exciting clash will kick off at 8:00 p.m. local time at Brisbane Stadium on July 29.

  • Date: Saturday, July 29
  • Time: 8:00 p.m. AEST (6:00 a.m. ET)

Here are the kick off times in regions around the world.

  Date Kickoff time
USA Sat, July 29 6:00 a.m. ET
Canada Sat, July 29 6:00 a.m. ET
UK Sat, July 29 11:00 a.m. BST
Australia Sat, July 29 8:00 p.m. AEST
India Sat, July 29 3:30 p.m. IST
Hong Kong Sat, July 29 6:00 p.m. HKT
Malaysia Sat, July 29 6:00 p.m. MYT
Singapore Sat, July 29 6:00 p.m. SGT
New Zealand Sat, July 29 10:00 p.m. NZST

MORE: France World Cup squad | Brazil World Cup squad

France vs Brazil TV channel, live stream

The match featuring two of the top teams in women's football, as well as two football mad countries, means the game will be available in all regions on both TV and online through live streaming.

Fans in select regions of the world can stream the Women's World Cup live on FIFA+, including in Japan, Brazil, Indonesia and Thailand.

  TV channel Streaming
USA FOX Sports, Telemundo (Spanish) Fubo, FOX Sports App, Telemundo Desportes (Spanish), Peacock
UK BBC One BBC iPlayer
Australia Optus Sport, RCN Nuestra Tele Optus Sport
Canada TSN1, TSN3, TSN4, RDS (French) TSN+, RDS App (French)
Hong Kong
India DD Sports Fancode
Malaysia FIFA+
New Zealand Sky Sport 1, RCN Nuestra Tele Sky Sport NOW, Sky GO NZ
Singapore meWATCH, FIFA WWC CH01

France vs Brazil lineups

France, who already have three star players missing this tournament due to injury, have been handed a further blow, with captain Wendie Renard picking up a calf injury which could see her miss the crucial match against Brazil.

Elisa de Almeida would be the most likely candidate to replace her at centre-back.

  • France projected starting lineup (4-4-2): Peyraud-Magnin (GK) — Lakrar, de Almeida, Cascarino, Karchaoui — Becho, Geyoro, Toletti, Majri — Le Sommer, Diani.

Brazil have no such issues, with their comfortable victory allowing them to rotate their side against Panama, ensuring they will have fresh legs.

Marta will most likely be an impact player off the bench, with Ary Borges and Debinha carrying the attack.

  • Brazil projected starting lineup (4-4-2): Leticia (GK) — Antonia, Lauren, Rafaelle, Tamires — Borges, Kerolin, Luana, Leal — Beatriz, Debinha.

France vs Brazil betting odds

This match promises to be one of the tightest in the group stages, with the sides being extremely difficult to split.

A low scoring encounter is expected, and picking the draw may just be the best bet in such a close match.

  France
win
Draw Brazil
win
Both teams
to score Y / N
Over / Under
2.5 goals
FRA +0.5 BRA -0.5
BetMGM
(USA)
+165 +220 +160 -111 / -128 +115 / -161 -217 +150
Sports
Interaction

(Canada)
2.60 3.05 2.60 1.86 / 1.75 2.21 / 1.60 1.47 2.60
SkyBet
(UK)
13/8 21/10 13/8 5/6 / 5/6 6/5 , 8/13
Unibet
(Australia)
2.65 3.20 2.80 1.95 / 1.82 2.25 / 1.61 1.45 2.80
Dafabet
(India)
2.55 3.02 2.65 1.92 / 1.78 2.25 / 1.57 1.44 2.59

Odds as of July 28

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.