The World Cup-winning U.S. women's national soccer team will play Costa Rica in an international friendly match at Jacksonville's TIAA Bank Field on Nov. 10.

Crowned queens of soccer once more in a sensational summer, the world champions are coming back to Jacksonville.

The U.S. women's national soccer team will conclude its 2019 Victory Tour with an exhibition match against Costa Rica at TIAA Bank Field on Sunday, Nov. 10, the U.S. Soccer Federation announced Wednesday.

Kickoff is scheduled for 8 p.m., with a television broadcast on ESPN2.

The game comes four months after the U.S. women defeated the Netherlands 2-0 to bring home their record fourth FIFA Women's World Cup from the tournament in France.

November's match will be the fourth for the U.S. women in Jacksonville and their first since April 5, 2018, when they defeated Mexico 4-1 in a game noted for a burst of two goals in three minutes by Alex Morgan and the 99th career international goal for veteran Carli Lloyd. The American women have also lined up on the First Coast against Norway in 1996 and against Scotland in 2013.

Among the milestones:

* U.S. women's national coach Jill Ellis previously announced plans to step down at the end of October, so November's game could be the second match for her still-to-be-determined successor. The Tallahassee Democrat reported this week that Mark Krikorian, head coach of NCAA champion Florida State, has turned down multiple approaches from the federation.

* Forward Christen Press, who scored her first two U.S. goals in Jacksonville in 2013 against Scotland, could reach the 50-goal mark on the First Coast.

* The U.S. women will be wrapping up a year that ranks in some ways as the most successful in the program's history. The team has won its last 14 matches, including all seven of its contests at the World Cup.

The match is the sixth for a U.S. national squad in Jacksonville during the past seven-plus years. The U.S. men played at the stadium against Scotland in 2012, against Nigeria in 2014 and against Trinidad & Tobago in a 2016 World Cup qualifier.

The announcement further signals that Jacksonville remains firmly within the plans of U.S. Soccer, even though the city currently has no clubs competing within the three highest divisions of the American professional game. Federation coaches and administrators have praised the TIAA Bank Field playing surface for years, regarding it among the nation's best for soccer.

Ticket sales to the public begin on Oct. 2, with group sales of 20 of more to open at 10 a.m. Oct. 3. The match will take place during the Jaguars' bye week, during the Veterans Day holiday weekend.

Jacksonville has previously set regional crowd records for U.S. women's matches, drawing 18,656 for the Scotland match in 2013, though that figure dipped to a still-substantial 14,360 in 2018 against Mexico. The city drew a regional-record 52,033 for the U.S. men in a tune-up for the 2014 World Cup against Nigeria.

The game forms part of a two-game set for the U.S. women, three days after a friendly match against Sweden in Columbus, Ohio.

TIAA Bank Field has become a Florida fortress for American soccer, which has won every international match in Jacksonville for the past 23 years. The American women will expect a similar result against Costa Rica, whom they have defeated in all 14 prior meetings. The most recent matchup went 4-0 to the U.S. women on July 22, 2016 in Kansas City, Kan.

While U.S. Soccer won't announce the roster for at least another month, the game could mean a First Coast return for St. Simons Island's Morgan Brian. The 26-year-old midfielder won a second Women's World Cup title as part of the U.S. squad in July, and she has started both of the team's most recent matches against Portugal.