Women’s World Cup Final Eight Is Wide Open, as Sport Sees a Changing of the Guard 

This picture taken on August 8, 2023, shows Japan's players during a training session at North Harbor Stadium in Auckland, ahead of their Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup football match against Sweden. (AFP)
This picture taken on August 8, 2023, shows Japan's players during a training session at North Harbor Stadium in Auckland, ahead of their Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup football match against Sweden. (AFP)
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Women’s World Cup Final Eight Is Wide Open, as Sport Sees a Changing of the Guard 

This picture taken on August 8, 2023, shows Japan's players during a training session at North Harbor Stadium in Auckland, ahead of their Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup football match against Sweden. (AFP)
This picture taken on August 8, 2023, shows Japan's players during a training session at North Harbor Stadium in Auckland, ahead of their Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup football match against Sweden. (AFP)

Few could have predicted the eight teams still standing when the Women's World Cup kicked off three weeks - and more surprisingly, the teams who are gone.

In the most wide open World Cup in history, Colombia and France were the last two teams to clinch quarter-final berths Tuesday evening, joining Spain, the Netherlands, Japan, Sweden, Australia and England to close the curtain on a breathtaking first two rounds full of delicious twists and turns.

When the tournament was expanded to 32 teams, there was apprehension around whether lower-ranked sides could compete at this level. But the exact opposite happened. Concerns about blowouts were blown out of the water in a changing of the guard.

Japan are the only previous World Cup champions remaining, having climbed the winners' podium in 2011.

Gone are four-times champions United States, who were gunning to become the first team to win three in a row, but were sent spinning out of the tournament before the semi-finals for the first time in history.

Also gone: Two-time champions Germany, 1995 winners Norway, reigning Olympic champions Canada, and Brazil, who had not been ousted in the group stage since 1995.

"Nothing is easy in this tournament," coach Sarina Wiegman said after England survived a last-16 scare from Nigeria before winning in a shootout.

"That's very exciting because we see the women's game has improved so much. You saw in the group stage, many games were equal, and it's not that the expected teams have won all the time."

In an end of an era, the elimination of the US, Canada and Brazil marked inauspicious World Cup finales for some of the game's biggest trailblazers in Megan Rapinoe, Christine Sinclair and Marta.

Others such as Colombia's dazzling teenager Linda Caicedo, Spain's integral midfield cog Aitana Bonmati and France's consistently excellent striker Kadidiatou Diani have stepped into the spotlight.

Who will win now is anybody's guess.

Japan's "Nadeshiko" - named for a pink flower that symbolizes Japanese beauty - are on a mission to erase the memory of their last-16 exit four years ago, and are tournament favorites after trouncing Norway 3-1 in the last-16.

They will test their credentials Friday against Sweden, who dumped the US out of the tournament on a decisive penalty shot measured in millimeters.

Spain's La Roja have already made history with their quarter-final appearance in three tries. They bounced back from an ugly 4-0 loss to Japan to dispatch Switzerland 5-1 in the last 16.

La Roja are in quarter-final action Friday against the Netherlands, who went undefeated in the group stage of their ninth World Cup appearance, including a 7-0 win over Vietnam in the tournament's most lopsided score.

Australia's Matildas have enjoyed a terrific run to the quarters despite missing the team's leading scorer Sam Kerr. She was a 78th-minute substitute in the host team's 2-0 last-16 win over Denmark and will surely start Kerr in what should be a thrilling quarter-final against France on Saturday.

Les Bleues are keen to bury their heartbreaking last-eight elimination four years ago in France, and coach Herve Renard said the pressure as hosts could weigh heavily on Australia.

"We're hoping to put Australia through exactly what France went through when they were the host country in 2019," Renard said after Les Bleues' 4-0 win over Morocco on Tuesday.

Fourth-ranked England, who are unbeaten in 36 of their last 37 games, would seem the favorite on Saturday against Columbia, the lowest-ranked team in the final eight at 25, but the Lionesses staggered into the quarters, fortunate to stave off a terrific Nigeria team through 120 minutes to win in a shootout.

The Lionesses have more big-game experience as reigning European champions, but Colombia have enjoyed better fan support than any team except Australia. England will also be without top scorer Lauren James, who received a red card for a stamp to the back of Nigeria's Michelle Alozie.



Formula 1 Races Take an Unpredictable Turn as McLaren Boss Zak Brown Revels in ‘Best Season’

Australian driver Oscar Piastri of McLaren F1 Team stands in front of his country's flag on the podium after winning the 2024 Formula One Grand Prix of Azerbaijan, at the Baku City Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, 15 September 2024. (EPA)
Australian driver Oscar Piastri of McLaren F1 Team stands in front of his country's flag on the podium after winning the 2024 Formula One Grand Prix of Azerbaijan, at the Baku City Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, 15 September 2024. (EPA)
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Formula 1 Races Take an Unpredictable Turn as McLaren Boss Zak Brown Revels in ‘Best Season’

Australian driver Oscar Piastri of McLaren F1 Team stands in front of his country's flag on the podium after winning the 2024 Formula One Grand Prix of Azerbaijan, at the Baku City Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, 15 September 2024. (EPA)
Australian driver Oscar Piastri of McLaren F1 Team stands in front of his country's flag on the podium after winning the 2024 Formula One Grand Prix of Azerbaijan, at the Baku City Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan, 15 September 2024. (EPA)

After a thrilling Azerbaijan Grand Prix, it seems like nearly half the field is capable of winning races in Formula 1.

McLaren chief executive Zak Brown, whose driver Lando Norris is Max Verstappen's closest title challenger, says he's enjoying the best show he's seen in his eight years in F1.

There have been six different winners in the last eight races, representing four different teams. Verstappen, whose dominance in 2022 and 2023 broke records, still leads the standings but his last win was in June.

"I think this is the best season I can think of ever in Formula 1 since I’ve been here," Brown told The Associated Press from the IndyCar season finale at Nashville Superspeedway in Tennessee.

Could it even be better than the 2021 fight between Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton, which was decided on the final lap of the year and helped fuel F1's Netflix boom? Brown thinks it might be.

"That was mega exciting, but it’s just two guys, two good guys. Now you’ve got four good teams in today’s race," he said.

"To have four teams that can win any weekend, and (Sergio) Perez was obviously back on form today, eight drivers going into Singapore and we’re going ‘I don’t know which of these four teams might win. I don’t know which of these eight drivers might win,’ I can’t recall Formula 1 having that level of competitiveness."

There was non-stop action Sunday.

McLaren's Oscar Piastri took the win in Baku, but only after a daring overtake on Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. Perez was in the mix for Red Bull until he and Ferrari's Carlos Sainz Jr. collided, handing third to Mercedes driver George Russell.

Further back, Norris surged through the field from 15th on the grid to finish fourth ahead of Verstappen and take another bite out of the champion's standings lead.

Teams' performances fluctuate week by week, depending on upgrades from the factories, track conditions and setup changes, like the one which Verstappen blamed for ruining his weekend in Azerbaijan.

Even a change of tires can turn an also-ran into a contender, Russell said Sunday.

"Just in this one race, we had a car that could have won if you took the pace from half of the race and a car that should have been outside the top 10 from the other half," he said, adding: "So I hope we’ve got the faster version" for next week's race in Singapore.

The Singapore street track hosted one of the most competitive races of an otherwise Red Bull-dominated 2023 season. On worn tires, Sainz held off Norris' McLaren and the two Mercedes of seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton and Russell, who crashed from third on the last lap.

Piastri is F1's on-form driver with the most points of anyone in the last seven races. He knows just how many moving parts are involved in success this year, and how quickly it can all change.

"We’ve been in with a chance everywhere, and I think today was definitely one of those days where we weren’t necessarily the quickest, but we had a car that could put us in the fight," the Australian said.

"We had a pit stop that could put us in the fight. We had some teamwork that put us in the fight. And it all managed to pay off."