Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
07/02 17:00 | 1 | Iceland Women vs Finland Women | View |
07/02 17:00 | 1 | Switzerland Women vs Norway Women | View |
07/03 17:00 | 1 | Belgium Women vs Italy Women | View |
07/03 17:00 | 1 | Spain Women vs Portugal Women | View |
07/04 17:00 | 1 | Denmark Women vs Sweden Women | View |
07/04 17:00 | 1 | Germany Women vs Poland Women | View |
07/05 17:00 | 1 | Wales Women vs Netherlands Women | View |
07/05 17:00 | 1 | France Women vs England Women | View |
07/06 17:00 | 2 | Switzerland Women vs Iceland Women | View |
07/06 17:00 | 2 | Norway Women vs Finland Women | View |
07/07 17:00 | 2 | Spain Women vs Belgium Women | View |
07/07 17:00 | 2 | Portugal Women vs Italy Women | View |
Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
07/31 16:00 | 1 | England Women vs Germany Women | 2-1 |
07/27 19:00 | 2 | Germany Women vs France Women | 2-1 |
07/26 19:00 | 2 | England Women vs Sweden Women | 4-0 |
07/23 19:00 | 3 | [1] France Women vs Netherlands Women [2] | 1-0 |
07/22 19:00 | 3 | [1] Sweden Women vs Belgium Women [2] | 1-0 |
07/21 19:00 | 3 | [1] Germany Women vs Austria Women [2] | 2-0 |
07/20 19:00 | 3 | [1] England Women vs Spain Women [2] | 1-1 |
07/18 19:00 | 3 | [4] Italy Women vs Belgium Women [3] | 0-1 |
07/18 19:00 | 3 | [2] Iceland Women vs France Women [1] | 1-1 |
07/17 16:00 | 3 | [2] Sweden Women vs Portugal Women [3] | 5-0 |
07/17 16:00 | 3 | [4] Switzerland Women vs Netherlands Women [1] | 1-4 |
07/16 19:00 | 3 | [4] Finland Women vs Germany Women [1] | 0-3 |
The UEFA European Women's Championship, also called the UEFA Women's Euro, held every four years and one year after the men's UEFA European Championship first held in 1984, is the main competition in women's association football between national teams of the UEFA confederation. The competition is the women's equivalent of the UEFA European Championship. The reigning champions are England, who won their home tournament in 2022. The most successful nation in the history of the tournament is Germany, with eight titles.
In 1957 in West Berlin, a European Championship was staged by the International Ladies Football Association. Four teams, representing West Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, and the eventual winners, England, played the tournament at the Poststadion, at a time when women's football teams were officially forbidden by the German Football Association, a ban that was widely defied.
The FICF, which eventually merged into the Italian Football Federation, organised a European tournament in Italy in 1969 for women's national teams, a tournament won by the home team, Italy, who beat Denmark 3–1 in the final. The two nations were also the finalists of the 1970 Women's World Cup in Italy.
Italy hosted another European women's tournament a decade later, the 1979 European Competition for Women's Football – won by Denmark.
UEFA displayed little enthusiasm for women's football and were particularly hostile to Italy's independent women's football federation. Sue Lopez, a member of England's squad, contended that a lack of female representation in UEFA was a contributory factor:
In 1971, UEFA had set up a committee for women's football, composed exclusively of male representatives, and by the time this committee folded in 1978 they had failed to organise any international competitions.
At a conference on 19 February 1980 UEFA resolved to launch its own competition for women's national teams. The meeting minutes had registered the 1979 competition as a "cause for concern". The first UEFA-run international tournament began only in 1982, when the 1984 European Competition for Women's Football qualification was launched. The 1984 Finals were won by Sweden. Norway won the 1987 Finals. Since then, the UEFA Women's Championship has been dominated by Germany, which has won eight out of ten events. Norway won in 1993 and the Netherlands in 2017. Germany's 2013 win had been their sixth in a row. In 2022, England won UEFA Women's Euro 2022, becoming the country's first senior association football team of either gender to win a major tournament since the men's team won the 1966 FIFA World Cup.
From 1984 to 1995, the tournament was initially played as a four-team event. The 1997 edition was the first that was played with eight teams, followed by the 2001 and 2005 editions. The third expansion happened between 2009 and 2013 when 12 teams participated. From 2017 onwards 16 teams compete for the championship.
The first three tournaments of the UEFA competition in the 1980s had the name "European Competition for Representative Women's Teams". With UEFA's increasing acceptance of women's football, this competition was given European Championship status by UEFA around 1990. Only the 1991 and 1995 editions have been used as European qualifiers for a FIFA Women's World Cup; starting in 1999, women's national teams adopted the separate World Cup qualifying competition and group system used in men's qualifiers.