The Women’s World Cup is growing in every respect.

The field for the latest edition of soccer’s quadrennial event is now 24 teams, news media coverage and viewership have mushroomed and sponsors are beating a path to be associated with the event.

It has also piqued the interest of the world’s bettors.

Games at the tournament are drawing millions of dollars worth of bets, another sign of the World Cup’s growing popularity but also one of future risks to the women’s game, where match-fixers long active in professional men’s soccer are beginning to cast their gaze toward their female counterparts. Last year, for instance, a group of individuals was accused of trying to fix matches in Spain’s first division, and the Belgian soccer authorities announced three players from the under-16 girls national team program had been approached to fix a game in return for $50,000 each. That attempt, as well as others approaches, failed.

But FIFA is taking no chances in France this summer. Soccer’s governing body says its program to counter attempts to manipulate matches in the tournament are its most extensive to date for the event.

“It’s the first time we have been able to gather so many stakeholders around the table,” Vincent Ven, FIFA’s head of integrity, said in a telephone interview. FIFA is working with Interpol, the French police, national financial crime prosecutors and France’s betting regulator. The event even has drawn the F.B.I. to France. Officials from the bureau are scheduled to meet with counterparts from France, Belgium and the Netherlands on Friday to hear about strategies adopted in Europe to tackle match manipulation, a potential threat amid the growth of the legalized the sports betting market in the United States.