World Lacrosse Women's World Championship

The World Lacrosse Women's World Championship (WLWWC), formerly known as the Women's Lacrosse World Cup (WLWC), the international championship of women's lacrosse, is held every four years. From its inception in 1982, it was sponsored by the governing body for women's lacrosse, the International Federation of Women's Lacrosse Associations, until that body merged in 2008 with the former governing body for men's lacrosse. Since 2009, the WLWC has been sponsored by the sport's new unified governing body, the Federation of International Lacrosse. The 2017 Women's Lacrosse World Cup was held in Guildford, England, and was won by the United States over Canada by the score of 10-5.

World Lacrosse Women's World Championship
SportWomen's lacrosse
Founded1982
CountriesWorld Lacrosse member nations
Most recent
champion(s)
 United States (8th title)
Most titles United States (8 titles)
Official websiteOfficial website
2017 Women's Lacrosse World Cup

History

Women playing Lacrosse

Four players took part in all of the first five editions of the Women's Lacrosse World Cup, Vivien Jones of Wales, Lois Richardson of England, and Sue Sofanos and Marge Barlow both of Australia.[1]

Championship games

YearHost cityCountryChampionRunner-UpScore
1982 Nottingham  England United States Australia 10–7 (ET)
1986 Philadelphia  United States Australia United States 10–7
1989 Perth  Australia United States England 6–5 (SD OT)
1993 Edinburgh  Scotland United States England 4–1
1997 Tokyo  Japan United States Australia 3–2 (SD OT)
2001 High Wycombe  England United States Australia 14–8
2005 Annapolis  United States Australia United States 14–7
2009 Prague  Czech Republic United States Australia 8–7
2013 Oshawa  Canada United States Canada 19–5
2017 Guildford  England United States Canada 10–5
2021 Towson  United States

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States82010
2 Australia2439
3 England0246
4 Canada0224
5 Scotland0011
Totals (5 nations)10101030


Past Results

Team 1982

(6)
1986

(6)
1989

(6)
1993

(8)
1997

(7)
2001

(8)
2005

(10)
2009

(16)
2013

(19)
2017

(25)
 Australia2nd1st3rd3rd2nd2nd1st2nd3rd4th
 Austria14th13th
 Belgium25th
 Canada3rd4th4th4th5th4th4th3rd2nd2nd
 Colombia24th
 China22nd
 Czech Republic8th8th9th10th
 Denmark15th
 England5th5th2nd2nd3rd3rd3rd4th4th3rd
 Finland16th
 Germany8th9th10th12th14th
 Iroquois11th7th12th
 Hong Kong18th18th
 Ireland5th10th13th
 Israel8th6th
 Italy11th
 Japan7th7th7th5th7th9th9th
 Latvia17th17th
 Mexico20th
 Netherlands13th14th16th
 New Zealand10th12th11th8th
 Scotland4th3rd5th5th6th6th7th8th6th5th
 South Korea16th15th15th
 Spain23rd
 Sweden19th21st
  Switzerland19th
 United States1st2nd1st1st1st1st2nd1st1st1st
Wales6th6th6th6th4th5th6th6th5th7th
gollark: "How come you get *two* planets to live on? I need three!"
gollark: Post-scarcity probably never since people will always want *some* other thing.
gollark: Since healthcare does require resources, it's more "paid for by someone else" than "actually free". But the US's system is so bad that that could probably work better and more cheaply *anyway*.
gollark: You can split it into threes by drawing lines from the points to the centre.
gollark: But people just might not be ready.

See also

References

  1. Goulding, Neil (9 January 2006). "Lois Richardson commits to England..." English Lacrosse Association. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
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