WNT Ramps Up Final Run Toward World Cup against New Zealand
WNT Ramps Up Final Run Toward World Cup against New Zealand

The U.S. Women’s National Team will begin a run of four domestic matches leading into the Women’s World Cup when it faces New Zealand on April 4 at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. The match has sold more than 32,000 tickets for what will be the U.S. WNT’s first game in St. Louis since 2007 and first appearance at Busch Stadium. The match will be broadcast on FOX Sports 1 at 3 p.m. CT. Fans can follow all the action on Twitter @ussoccer_wnt and @ussoccer_esp, or Instagram.
The ticket amount sold so far puts the match within striking distance of the largest stand-alone crowd for a U.S. WNT home friendly in the history of the program. The current record is the 36,405 that turned out at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, to watch the USA defeat Finland 6-0 on Oct. 7, 1999, following the USA’s historic run to the 1999 Women’s World Cup title. The U.S. Women are coming off a victorious turn at the 2015 Algarve Cup in Portugal, where the Americans triumphed 2-0 against France in the championship game to win its 10th title. The USA comes into the match against New Zealand – its first domestic match of the year – with a 4-1-1 record so far in 2015.
BACK TO ST. LOUIS WITH A SPLASH: The U.S. Women’s National Team returns to St. Louis for the first time in seven and a half years (10/13/07 vs. Mexico; 5-1 win in front of 10,861) and U.S. Soccer has partnered with Major League Baseball’s St. Louis Cardinals for this event. Over 32,000 tickets have been sold, putting the match within striking distance of the largest stand-alone crowd for a U.S. WNT home friendly in the history of the program. The current record is the 36,405 that turned out at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, to watch the USA defeat Finland 6-0 on Oct. 7, 1999, following the historic run to the 1999 Women’s World Cup title.
Date Opponent Result Location Attendance
7/10/1999 China PR* 0-0 T (5-4 PK) Pasadena, Calif. 90,125
10/7/1999 Finland 6-0 W Kansas City, Mo. 36,405
10/10/1999 Brazil 4-2 W Louisville, Ky. 35,211
9/21/2003 Sweden* 3-1 W Washington, D.C. 34,144
4/4/2015 New Zealand St. Louis, Mo. 32,000+
*FIFA Women’s World Cup match
U.S. Soccer is looking to build on the successful soccer events Busch Stadium has hosted in recent years:
Games at Edward Jones Dome:
WELCOME HOME: There are two St. Louis natives on the roster who could get to play in front of their hometown crowd: defender Becky Sauerbrunn, who was an All-American at Ladue High School and the 2003 Missouri Player of the Year, and defender Lori Chalupny, who was an All-American at Nerinx Hall High School.
U.S. Women’s National Team Roster By Position:
GOALKEEPERS (3): Ashlyn Harris (Washington Spirit), Alyssa Naeher (Boston Breakers), Hope Solo (Seattle Reign FC)
DEFENDERS (10): Lori Chalupny (Chicago Red Stars), Crystal Dunn (Washington Spirit), Whitney Engen (Western NY Flash), Julie Johnston (Chicago Red Stars), Meghan Klingenberg (Houston Dash), Ali Krieger (Washington Spirit), Kelley O’Hara (Sky Blue FC), Christie Rampone (Sky Blue FC), Becky Sauerbrunn (FC Kansas City), Rachel Van Hollebeke (Portland Thorns FC)
MIDFIELDERS (7): Shannon Boxx (Chicago Red Stars), Morgan Brian (Houston Dash), Tobin Heath (Portland Thorns FC), Lauren Holiday (FC Kansas City), Carli Lloyd (Houston Dash), Heather O’Reilly (FC Kansas City), Megan Rapinoe (Seattle Reign FC)
FORWARDS (5): Sydney Leroux (Western NY Flash), Alex Morgan (Portland Thorns FC), Christen Press (Chicago Red Stars), Amy Rodriguez (FC Kansas City), Abby Wambach (unattached)
U.S. ROSTER NOTES:
Megan Rapinoe celebrates scoring in the second of two matches vs. New Zealand in 2013 with Sydney Leroux.
IN THE RECORD BOOKS:
SEND-OFF SERIES BRINGS U.S. WNT TO NORCAL, SOCAL AND NJ: The USA will play just 360 more minutes of international soccer before the Women’s World Cup kicks off this summer. Three of the final four remaining matches will be part of the USA’s Send-Off Series [TICKETS]. These three games will take the WNT to the new Avaya Stadium in San Jose, California, to face Ireland on May 10; the familiar surroundings of StubHub Center in Carson, California, on May 17 to face Mexico; and Red Bull Arena in Harrison, New Jersey, on May 30, to play the Korea Republic. The USA’s 23-player Women’s World Cup roster will likely be named before the squad begins the Send-Off Series.
The U.S. Women's National Team was drawn into Group D at the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup where it will face Australia, Nigeria and Sweden. The seventh edition of the tournament will take place from June 6-July 5 in Canada. The U.S. will open the tournament against Australia on June 8 at Winnipeg Stadium, face Sweden on June 12 in Winnipeg, and finish Group D play against Nigeria on June 16 at BC Place in Vancouver. The USA, Nigeria and Sweden have competed in every edition of the FIFA Women's World Cup.
2015 U.S. WNT SCHEDULE:
Date |
Opponent |
Time |
TV/Result |
Venue |
Feb. 8 |
France |
-- |
0-2 L |
Stade du Moustoir; Lorient, France |
Feb. 13 |
England |
-- |
1-0 W |
stadiummk; Milton Keynes, England |
March 4 |
Norway* |
-- |
2-1 W |
Vila Real de San Antonio, Portugal |
March 6 |
Switzerland* |
-- |
3-0 W |
Vila Real de San Antonio, Portugal |
March 9 |
Iceland* |
-- |
0-0 T |
Lagos, Portugal |
March 11 |
France* |
-- |
2-0 W |
Faro, Portugal |
April 4 |
New Zealand |
3 p.m. CT |
FOX Sports 1 |
Busch Stadium; St. Louis, Mo. |
May 10 |
Ireland |
11:30 a.m. PT |
FOX Sports 1 |
Avaya Stadium; San Jose, Calif. |
May 17 |
Mexico |
6 p.m. PT |
FOX Sports 1 |
StubHub Center; Carson, Calif. |
May 30 |
Korea Rep. |
4:30 p.m. ET |
ESPN, WatchESPN |
Red Bull Arena; Harrison, N.J. |
June 8 |
Australia |
6:30 p.m. CT |
FOX Sports |
Winnipeg Stadium; Winnipeg, Canada |
June 12 |
Sweden |
7 p.m. CT |
FOX Sports |
Winnipeg Stadium; Winnipeg, Canada |
June 16 |
Nigeria |
5 p.m. PT |
FOX Sports |
BC Place Stadium; Vancouver, Canada |
* Algarve Cup
WNT Midfielder Lauren Holiday evades New Zealand's Helen Collins in the teams' last meeting in 2013.
USA VS. NEW ZEALAND SERIES
LAST TIME
On the field for the USA vs. NZL:
Oct. 30, 2013 – Columbus Crew Stadium; Columbus, Ohio
USA 1 Leroux 42
NZL 1 Wilkinson 87
Lineups:
USA: 1-Hope Solo; 11-Ali Krieger, 4-Becky Sauerbrunn, 3-Christie Rampone (capt.) (16-Rachel Buehler, 46), 8-Kristie Mewis; 7-Yael Averbuch (10-Carli Lloyd, 70), 15-Megan Rapinoe, 12-Lauren Holiday; 9-Heather O’Reilly, 20-Abby Wambach, 2-Sydney Leroux (23-Christen Press, 78)
Substitutions Not Used: 13-Alex Morgan, 18-Nicole Barnhart, 22-Meghan Klingenberg, 26-Leigh Ann Robinson
Head coach: Tom Sermanni
NZL: 21-Erin Nayler (1-Jenny Bindon, 46); 5-Abby Erceg (capt.), 2-Ria Percival, 7-Ali Riley, 15-Rebekah Stott; 11-Kirsty Yallop (13-Rosie White, 79), 4-Katie Hoyle, 16-Annalie Longo (12-Betsy Hassett, 60); 10-Sarah Gregorius (20-Hellen Collins, 67), 9-Amber Hearn, 17-Hannah Wilkinson (18-Megan Lee,90+2)
Substitutions Not Used: 3-Anna Green, 6-Meikayla Moore, 14-Elizabeth Milne, 19-Stephanie Skilton
Head coach: Tony Readings
IN FOCUS: NEW ZEALAND
Current FIFA World Ranking: 17
2015 Women’s World Cup Qualifying: Won the 2014 OFC Women’s Championship (3-0-0; 30 GF, 0 GA)
Women’s World Cup Finals Appearances: 4 –1991 (11th), 2007 (15th), 2011 (12th), 2015
Record vs. USA: 1-10-1
Head Coach: Tony Readings
Championship Honors: Oceania Champions (1983, 1991, 2007, 2010, 2014)
Leading Women’s World Cup Qualifying Scorers: Amber Hearn (7), Helen Collins (5), Sarah Gregorius (3), Annalie Longo (3), Rosie White (3)
Key Players: Abby Erceg (Jena), Ali Riley (FC Rosengard), Amber Hearn (Jena), Hannah Wilkinson (University of Tennessee), Katie Hoyle (Notts County)
NEW ZEALAND ROSTER NOTES