SheBelieves Cup 2023 schedule: TV and streaming in English and Spanish

All tournament games will stream in English and Spanish, with most broadcast on TV as well

The SheBelieves Cup is back for 2023, with the U.S. women’s national team facing some intriguing tests.

All six games in the tournament will be streamed in English on HBO Max, with two USWNT matches broadcast on TNT as well. Universo will broadcast each game in Spanish, with Peacock the streaming option.

This year’s version of the SheBelieves Cup features a USWNT side gearing up for its attempt to be the first team to ever win three straight World Cups. They’ll begin their tournament against their arch-rivals Canada, a tough, resilient side who are garnering additional attention due to their ongoing clash with Canada Soccer.

Next up is Japan, a team that has long given the USWNT fits, and that is building a new, more expansive tactical identity for this summer’s World Cup. Finally, the USWNT will take on Brazil, a nightmare in transition who have two elite match-winners in Debinha and Marta.

Here is the full television schedule for the 2023 SheBelieves Cup.

Schedule

Thursday, February 16

Japan 0-1 Brazil
USA 2-0 Canada

Sunday, February 19

USA 1-0 Japan
Brazil 0-2 Canada

Wednesday, February 22

Canada 0-3 Japan
USA 2-1 Brazil

Standings

  1. USA – 9 points (+4 goal difference)
  2. Japan – 3 points (+1 goal difference)
  3. Brazil – 3 points (-2 goal difference)
  4. Canada – 3 points (-3 goal difference)

Past winners

  • 2016: USA
  • 2017: France
  • 2018: USA
  • 2019: England
  • 2020: USA
  • 2021: USA
  • 2022: USA

USWNT roster

Goalkeepers (3): Adrianna Franch (Kansas City Current; 10), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage; 12), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars; 87)

Defenders (7): Alana Cook (OL Reign; 21/0), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage; 24/0), Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns FC; 128/24), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC; 12/0), Sofia Huerta (OL Reign; 27/0), Becky Sauerbrunn (Portland Thorns FC; 212/0), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign; 70/1)

Midfielders (6): Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon, FRA; 123/26), Taylor Kornieck (San Diego Wave FC; 9/2), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign; 86/24), Kristie Mewis (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 47/7), Ashley Sanchez (Washington Spirit; 19/3), Andi Sullivan (Washington Spirit; 39/3)

Forwards (7): Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit; 15/5), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave FC; 201/120), Midge Purce (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 22/4), Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign; 197/63), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit; 12/2), Mallory Swanson (Chicago Red Stars; 84/28), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 49/15)

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Mallory Swanson is just feeling it

The USWNT forward is in the form of her life right now

Mallory Swanson was limited to a bench role at the 2019 World Cup. She then didn’t even make the Olympic squad two years later.

This summer, though, Swanson appears poised to not only play a central role for the U.S. as they aim to win a third straight World Cup, but she may be positioning herself as the team’s most important attacking piece.

That’s the kind of form the forward has been in for the better part of a year, which she demonstrated again on Thursday against Canada.

The USWNT defeated Canada 2-0 in their SheBelieves Cup opener, with Swanson scoring both goals. The second was an opportunistic finish after a mistake from Canada but the first was the pick of the night, demonstrating quick thinking and textbook technique to keep the ball down on the volley.

It was the fourth consecutive USWNT appearance with a goal for the 24-year-old, who has six goals over that span. As head coach Vlatko Andonovski said after the game, Swanson is excelling not just on her own, but also in combining with Lindsey Horan and Crystal Dunn on the left to create overloads.

“She plays so well individually but we can see more and more Mal combining with the players around her,” he said. “One of the reasons why I felt like our left [side] subgroup was good was because of her synchronized movement with Lindsey and Crystal.”

Andonovski noted that Swanson is still only 24 and has yet to reach her ceiling but, having made her USWNT debut as a 17-year-old, she is now vastly experienced at the international level.

Swanson has 88 caps already and is older than several of players expected to join her in attack at the World Cup, like Trinity Rodman, Catarina Macario, Sophia Smith and Ashley Sanchez.

The coach is noticing Swanson becoming more of a leader, and demonstrating the USWNT’s ideal patterns of play for some of her less experienced teammates

“A growth that we see in Mal is her leadership qualities,” Andonovski said. “She’s becoming a really good leader on the field. Her understanding of the game is very good and her ability to help the players around [her] is tremendous.

“She doesn’t realize how much she’s helping with her communication, especially some of the younger players that sometimes play around her like Ashley Sanchez or Ashley Hatch or Trinity, so very happy with her and I truly believe we still haven’t seen the best of Mal.”

That is a truly scary prospect for opponents, who will be forced to reckon with Swanson and several other world-class attackers in Australia and New Zealand this summer. Those opponents will hope a couple of them cool off between now and then, but Swanson doesn’t look like she’ll be one of them.

“She’s in the moment,” Andonovski said. “Not just confident and not just playing well but it’s one of those things when you’re just feeling it, and she’s just feeling it. That’s the simplest way I can put it: She’s just feeling it.”

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USWNT midfield ‘tremendous’ in SheBelieves Cup win over Canada

The USWNT boss was delighted with Horan, Sanchez, and Sullivan’s play against Canada

The SheBelieves Cup may be delivering more clarity to the U.S. women’s national team’s midfield picture.

USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski has taken more questions about that part of his team in recent months than any other. However, a recent change has shifted it from a cause for concern to one that is making progress towards being an area of true strength at the World Cup.

Even without Rose Lavelle (who was held out as a precaution due to a minor injury), the USWNT central trio of Lindsey Horan, Ashley Sanchez, and Andi Sullivan controlled play on both sides of the ball, giving their side the platform for a straightforward 2-0 victory over Canada on Thursday.

Speaking to reporters after the match, Andonovski first praised his entire team from a mentality and effort perspective, and then had plenty to say about the particular qualities of his midfield’s performance.

“Obviously we have a plan,” said Andonovski, alluding to an ongoing process that has seen the USWNT have to move away from having veteran stars like Julie Ertz and Sam Mewis available. “The plan is in several stages, and in the stage that we’re at right now, I’m actually very happy with our midfield.”

Andonovski has most recently made a small, but nonetheless significant change to how his midfield structure looks, and the distribution of roles that comes with it. A team that spent much of 2021 and 2022 playing out of a 4-3-3 formation — with two midfielders (usually Lavelle and Horan) obliged to join the attack — has since this past November moved into a 4-2-3-1. That has sacrificed attacking numbers, but the trade brings solidity against counter-attacks and fluency in possession.

That change helped tilt the win against Germany that ended a rare three-game losing streak for the USWNT, and against Canada it seemed to really be bearing fruit against top-tier opposition.

In a match where Canada were held to 0.24 expected goals despite trailing from the game’s opening stages, Sullivan was a midfield force, tackling with authority and prompting the team’s tempo. Horan seemed to barely put a foot wrong alongside her, easily moving the ball out of pressure and playing passes into the final third. Sanchez, playing as the No. 10, nearly scored an early golazo and was able to repeatedly draw Canadian defenders before dishing the ball off to open players.

Praise for the entire midfield triangle

Andonovski was particularly effusive about the partnership between Horan and Sullivan, and how that benefits both players individually.

“I’m gonna start with Andi. I thought she was tremendous,” said Andonovski. “I thought that she was very good defensively and covered every little gap that developed, and part of the reason why Canada couldn’t break through the middle was because of Andi and her ability to close down.”

On Horan, Andonovski said with a smile that “on both sides of the ball, Lindsey was Lindsey… pressure doesn’t faze her, and she has ability to do things on the ball that not many players can do. She’s just a world-class midfielder. But one thing that I was happy about Lindsey, is that she doesn’t neglect the work off the ball. She puts [in] a proper shift, and effort off the ball. So that’s what makes her world-class.”

Andonovski said that Sanchez, who got her 20th cap but has largely been restricted to appearances off the bench, did well but would benefit from more time to gel with striker Alex Morgan and the rest of the attack. In particular, her relationship with Morgan in the defensive phases was tested, and the USWNT boss says that was a major positive to take from the game.

“Sanchez has got special qualities,” explained Andonovski. “It’s not easy to synchronize her movements right away, because she hasn’t played much with Alex [Morgan], but when they do [synchronize], I think it worked very well. I’m very happy where she’s at positionally, and happy where she’s at in the stage of her development.

“The [area] that I feel like she needs to grow and get better is the defensive part, because she puts so much work and effort [in], but her timing and angle is just a little bit off. And it’s not quite synchronized with Alex’s movement when we want to shift from mid-block into high press, for example.”

Andonovski said that Sanchez “studies the game a lot” and said that Canada’s test of how well the USWNT’s front four could restrict their build-out phase is a great learning opportunity for Sanchez when her side doesn’t have the ball.

“I have no doubt that she’s gonna get better. In fact, games like this as well, it’s going to help her get better, because if we try certain things with her against teams that [are] not going to expose us, we’re probably not going to see everything that we want to see,” said Andonovski. “Now, every little thing: if you’re not in the proper spot, if you’re one step to the left or one step to the right, you’re gonna get exposed, and that’s where you learn the most.”

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Swanson strikes twice, USWNT in control during SheBelieves Cup win over Canada

Swanson is looking unstoppable these days for the USWNT

The U.S. women’s national team showed signs that they’re shifting into World Cup mode on Thursday.

A dominant USWNT created a slew of early chances and stifled Canada en route to a 2-0 win in what was the SheBelieves Cup opener for both teams. Mallory Swanson carried on her inspired recent form, scoring both goals in a match that was never particularly close.

Of course, the game arguably wasn’t the primary concern on the night. Earlier this week, Canada said they’re playing the SheBelieves Cup under protest, and took the field for warm-ups and national anthems in purple shirts reading “Enough is enough.”

Canada’s players refused to train early in the window before being forced back to work by the specifics of Canadian labor law. On Tuesday, players detailed funding cuts and a collective sense of hitting a breaking point with their federation. Both teams gathered in a circle at midfield before kickoff in a striking show of solidarity between two teams who have played so many physical, intense matches over the years.

Meanwhile, the USWNT had a statement of their own already on the docket, with players wearing wrist tape bearing a “defend trans joy” message. That echoed statements from Alex Morgan on the the side’s frustration at seeing anti-trans legislation being proposed or enacted in all three states that will host the SheBelieves Cup.

After the shows of unity and support, the USWNT paid Canada what is arguably their ultimate show of respect, playing at full intensity and challenging their longtime foe at every turn. There is no “let’s take it easy on them” in this rivalry, after all.

Swanson’s shot from the endline nearly beat Kailen Sheridan inside the game’s first minute, and Sheridan had to produce an even better save to deny Ashley Sanchez’s third-minute blast from 19 yards.

The level of pressure was always likely to become a goal, and Swanson answered the call in the seventh minute. Trinity Rodman froze Allysha Chapman before crossing low from the right, and though Morgan couldn’t corral the service, her touch teed Swanson up for a superb half-volley past Sheridan.

Lindsey Horan glanced a 17th minute header off the foot of the post after a deep cross from Emily Fox caught Canada unprepared.

The Canadians finally got a break as the USWNT scaled down its high-press to conserve energy, holding an organized shape and allowing Canada’s defenders to pass amongst one another for a spell.

Unfortunately for Canada, that possession ended up being costly. Under token pressure from Morgan, Vanessa Gilles turned into further trouble, eventually sending a pass to Sheridan that really just set Swanson up for an empty-netter.

Canada’s first serious look at goal came in first-half stoppage time, but it required a stellar save from Alyssa Naeher, who tipped away Janine Beckie’s 21-yard rocket in the final moments of the half.

Play took on a less consistent tempo in the second half, with Canada able to blunt some of the USWNT’s attacking threat by winning some physical challenges and committing some tactical fouls. Still, that was only half of the recipe for a comeback, and Naeher had little to do other than be tended to by trainers briefly for what appeared to simply be some muscle tightness.

Still, the USWNT probably should have run out with a more comfortable final margin. Substitute Kristie Mewis did brilliantly to control a long ball and, while being dragged down, place a delicate pass into the path of Ashley Hatch. In alone, Hatch took an extra touch that allowed Sheridan to close the angle and stop her from eight yards out.

The win puts the USWNT atop the SheBelieves Cup standings, ahead of Brazil — who beat Japan 1-0 earlier on Thursday — on goal difference. The U.S. will take on the Nadeshiko in Nashville on Sunday, while Canada and Brazil will play the second half of the doubleheader.

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Canada and USWNT join in protest ahead of SheBelieves Cup opener

The two teams joined together in solidarity prior to kickoff in Orlando

Canada and the U.S. women’s national team joined together around the center circle prior to Thursday’s SheBelieves Cup opener, as the USWNT showed solidarity with its rival’s ongoing fight against the Canadian federation.

Canada’s players entered the field at Exploria Stadium wearing purple shirts emblazoned with the message “Enough is Enough.” Prior to the game, they warmed up with their shirts turned inside out in an effort to obscure the Canada Soccer logo.

Canada’s players said in a statement prior to the match that the color purple was chosen because “purple has historically been associated with efforts to achieve gender equality.”

AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack

At issue for Canada’s players is Canada Soccer’s spending cuts in a World Cup year, as well as what they claim to be poor governance and inequity in how the federation treats them compared to the Canadian men’s team.

The team initially said that they would go on strike during the SheBelieves Cup if their demands weren’t met, but were quickly forced to back down from that threat after Canada Soccer threatened them with a lawsuit if they followed through.

“The SheBelieves [Cup] is being played in protest,” said Canada’s captain Christine Sinclair.

The American players, who only recently emerged from a years-long fight against their own federation, have been vocally backing their rivals to the north.

In a statement released prior to the game, the USWNT said: “Although we are now on the other side of this fight and can focus on our play on the field, our counterparts in Canada and elsewhere are experiencing the same pervasive misogyny and unequal treatment that we faced.”

The USWNT also wore armbands that said “Defend Trans Joy” to protest anti-trans youth legislation being proposed and enacted across the country — including in Florida, the location of Thursday’s game.

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