[caption id="attachment_126378" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Wendie Renard[/caption]
Hosts France opened the 2019 Women’s World Cup with a brilliant victory over South Korea in front of an overjoyed, sold-out crowd in Paris.
Corinne Diacre’s side, among the favourites to win the eighth edition of this competition, produced a breathless performance to take a deserved 3-0 lead at half-time thanks to forward Eugenie Le Sommer’s early opener and two headers from towering defender Wendie Renard. Midfielder Amandine Henry curled in an excellent fourth goal late on, much to the delight of the 45,261 fans inside the Parc des Princes. England and Scotland will meet on Sunday in Nice as they get their campaigns under way, with a total of 24 teams taking part hoping to reach the final in Lyon on 7 July. Defending champions the United States will get their campaign under way against Thailand on Tuesday, with England and two-time winners Germany among the other teams being strongly tipped for success. Six groups of four teams will compete for the 16 places in the knockout phase, with the top two teams in each group qualifying automatically, as well as the four best third-placed sides.France show credentials with ‘energy, movement and pressing’
VAR makes impression on tournament debut
Player of the Match – Wendie Renard (France)

Quick off the mark – the stats
- This was the biggest win by a host nation at a Women’s World Cup since 2003 when USA beat Nigeria 5-0.
- The eventual winners have started their campaign with a victory in all previous seven tournaments to date.
- France have won their opening match at their last three World Cup tournaments. South Korea have lost their opening match at all three finals.
- South Korea did not register an attempt until the 70th minute.
- France have kept a clean sheet in all seven of their World Cup wins.
- Eugenie Le Sommer’s goal after nine minutes was the fastest in an opening game.
- Only Marie-Laure Delie (5) has scored more tournament goals for France then Le Sommer (4).
- Wendie Renard became the fourth player to score a World Cup double for France, no-one has ever gone on to score a hat-trick.
- Ten of Renard’s last 11 goals for France have been headers.
- Le Sommer and Amandine Henry have both now scored at consecutive World Cup tournaments. They are the third and fourth players to score in two different editions for France.