#RiseHigher – Canada ready to face hosts Japan in the opening match of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team is ready to kick off their Olympic journey at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Canada will face the Olympic hosts and former FIFA Women’s World Cup™ champions Japan, South American nation Chile, and Great Britain in Group E of the Women’s Olympic Football Tournamen…
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team is ready to kick off their Olympic journey at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Canada will face the Olympic hosts and former FIFA Women’s World Cup™ champions Japan, South American nation Chile, and Great Britain in Group E of the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament.
Canada will kick off their Olympic Games journey when they
face Japan in the opening match of the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament in
Sapporo on 21 July at 19.30 local (06.30 ET / 03.30 PT). The match will be
broadcast live on CBC and fans will also find extended coverage across Canada
Soccer’s digital channels on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube featuring
the hashtag #CANWNT.
For Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team Head Coach Bev
Priestman, the objective is clear: to make history by getting back on the
podium for a third consecutive time.
“We have world-class high-performance players that want to
win and they have been very clear that they want to change the colour of the
medal,” said Priestman. “Changing the colour of the medal is ultimately what we
want to achieve. So far for us it will be how we approach the tournament, we
have six games in eighteen days in very difficult playing conditions. We will
need to use our depth well, but I truly believe that on any given days, if we
turn up and we are ready, we can do that.”
Canada’s team will once again be led by two-time Olympic
bronze medallist and Captain Christine Sinclair. Sinclair will be participating
at her fourth Women’s Olympic Football Tournament and thinks that the depth of
the current squad is exciting to watch.
“We have 22 players that could be making a huge difference
on the pitch and I don’t think we necessarily had that much depth in the past,”
said Sinclair. “All our players are playing in top leagues around the world and
they are ready to go. It’s a unique group, that is very enjoyable and very
competitive, and I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t feel we wouldn’t have a chance
to win.”
This will be the 15th international meeting between Canada
and Japan since they first met on 5 May 1995 in Tokyo. The two sides have
traded wins in their last two meetings, with Canada the winners in 2018 at the
Algarve Cup in Portugal and Japan the winners in 2019 after Canada traveled to
meet their hosts in Shizuoka. Both Canada and Japan most recently reached the
Round of 16 at the FIFA Women’s World Cup France 2019™. In the past decade
Japan were champions at the FIFA Women’s World Cup Germany 2011 and silver
medal winners at both the London 2012 Olympic Games and FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada
2015.
After their opening match, Canada will face Chile on 24 July
at 16.30 local (03.30 ET / 00.30 PT), before wrapping up the group phase
against Great Britain in Kashima on 27 July at 20.00 local (07.00 ET / 04.00
PT). From 12 nations in three groups, the top-eight nations advance to the
Olympic Quarterfinals from which winners then advance to the Semifinals and
then a chance to win a medal. The Women’s Olympic Football Tournament runs 21
July through 6 August 2021, with this year’s gold medal match at Tokyo’s
Olympic Stadium.
Canada are one of just five nations in the world that have
qualified for each of the past four Women’s Olympic Football Tournaments.
Canada are also the only nation in the world to reach the podium at both London
2012 and Rio 2016 in women’s football.
OLYMPIC MEDAL WINNERS & CONCACAF CHAMPIONS
Canada are two-time Olympic bronze medal winners (2012 and
2016) and two-time Concacaf champions (1998 and 2010). In all, Canada have
participated in seven consecutive editions of the FIFA Women’s World Cup™ (1995
to 2019) and three consecutive editions of the Women’s Olympic Football
Tournament (2008 to 2016). At Rio 2016, Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team
were the first Canadian Olympic team to win back-to-back medals at a summer Olympic
Games in more than a century.
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Youth Teams, meanwhile,
have won four Concacaf youth titles: the 2004 and 2008 Concacaf Women’s
Under-20 Championship, the 2010 Concacaf Women’s Under-17 Championship, and the
2014 Concacaf Girls’ Under-15 Championship. Canada have qualified for seven
editions of the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (including a silver medal at Canada
2002) and all six editions of the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup (including a
fourth-place finish at Uruguay 2018).