Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/18 20:00 | 6 | [3] Juventus Women vs Valerenga Women [4] | 3-0 |
12/18 20:00 | 6 | [2] Arsenal Women vs Bayern Munich Women [1] | 3-2 |
12/18 17:45 | 6 | [4] FSK St Polten Women vs Hammarby Women [3] | 1-2 |
12/18 17:45 | 6 | [2] Barcelona Women vs Man City Women [1] | 3-0 |
12/17 20:00 | 6 | [3] Roma Women vs Galatasaray Women [4] | 3-0 |
12/17 20:00 | 6 | [1] Lyon Women vs Wolfsburg Women [2] | 1-0 |
12/17 17:45 | 6 | [2] Real Madrid Women vs Chelsea Women [1] | 1-2 |
12/17 17:45 | 6 | [3] FC Twente Women vs Celtic Women [4] | 3-0 |
12/12 20:00 | 5 | [3] Hammarby Women vs Barcelona Women [2] | 0-3 |
12/12 20:00 | 5 | [1] Man City Women vs FSK St Polten Women [4] | 2-0 |
12/12 17:45 | 5 | [4] Valerenga Women vs Arsenal Women [2] | 1-3 |
12/12 17:45 | 5 | [1] Bayern Munich Women vs Juventus Women [3] | 4-0 |
The UEFA Women's Champions League, previously called the UEFA Women's Cup (2001–2009), is a European women's association football competition. It involves the top club teams from countries affiliated with the European governing body UEFA.
The competition was first played in 2001–02 under the name UEFA Women's Cup, and renamed the Champions League for the 2009–10 edition. The most significant changes in 2009 were the inclusion of runners-up from the top eight ranked nations, a one-off final as opposed to the two-legged finals in previous years, and – until 2018 – playing the final in the same city as the men's UEFA Champions League final. In the 2021–22 season, the competition proper included a group stage for the first time in the Women's Champions League era.
Lyon is the most successful club in the competition's history, winning the title eight times, including five consecutive titles from 2016 to 2020. Barcelona are the current champions, having beaten Lyon in the 2024 final.
The idea of creating two new women's European Cups is regularly raised to offer more matches.