The best photos of the 2023 Women's World Cup
Spanish players celebrate after winning the Women's World Cup final on Sunday, August 20.
Maddie Meyer/FIFA/Getty Images

The best photos of the 2023 Women's World Cup

Updated 1533 GMT (2333 HKT) August 20, 2023

Spanish players celebrate after winning the Women's World Cup final on Sunday, August 20.
Maddie Meyer/FIFA/Getty Images

For the first time in its history, Spain has won the Women's World Cup.

Olga Carmona's goal in the 29th minute was the only scoring in the 1-0 victory over England on Sunday. The match was played at Stadium Australia in Sydney.

Spain is now the fifth different nation to win the Women's World Cup, joining Germany, Japan, Norway and the United States.

Spanish midfielder Aitana Bonmatí won the Golden Ball, which is awarded to the tournament's best player, and teammate Salma Paralluelo won the Young Player Award. Japan's Hinata Miyazawa won the Golden Boot as the tournament's top scorer (five goals), and England's Mary Earps won the Golden Glove as the tournament's best goalkeeper.

This was the first time ever that the Women's World Cup was hosted by two countries. Australia and New Zealand shared hosting duties.

This was also the first time that the event features 32 teams, expanding from 24. Eight countries made their Women's World Cup debut: Haiti, Morocco, Panama, the Philippines, Portugal, the Republic of Ireland, Vietnam and Zambia.