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The 2023 Women's Euro Winners Cup was the eighth edition of the Women's Euro Winners Cup (WEWC), an annual continental beach soccer tournament for women's top-division European clubs. The championship is viewed as beach soccer's rudimentary version of the UEFA Women's Champions League in its parent sport, association football. [1]
2024 Women's Euro Winners Cup The Women's Euro Winners Cup (WEWC) is an annual continental beach soccer club competition contested between top-division European women's teams; the clubs that are their country's national league/cup champions (and, for some nations, one or more runners-up) from countries all across Europe take part.
In September 2021, UEFA announced that the prize money for the UEFA Women's Euro 2022 championship will be €16 million, double the amount of the UEFA Women's Euro 2017 prize money. [77] The prize money distribution for the teams is: [78] Qualification to the final series: €600,000; Win a match in group stage: €100,000
There remains a huge discrepancy in prize money between the men’s and women’s World Cup. The record prize money of $152m (£126m) announced by Fifa before the tournament remains some way short ...
The UEFA Women's Europa Cup is a planned annual international women's football competition organised by UEFA, the governing body of the sport for Europe. It will serve as a secondary club competition below the UEFA Women's Champions League and will run concurrently to it. [1] The first edition is scheduled to take place in the 2025–26 season. [1]
2023 Women's Euro Winners Cup; 2024 Women's Euro Winners Cup This page was last edited on 6 May 2023, at 23:00 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
How does World Cup 2023 prize money compare to previous tournaments? The prize purse for the 2023 men’s edition is the exact same amount as the previous tournament in 2019 which also awarded $4m ...
[1] In 1957 in West Berlin, a European Championship was staged by the International Ladies Football Association. [2] [3] Four teams, representing West Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, and the eventual winners, England, played the tournament at the Poststadion, [2] [3] at a time when women's football teams were officially forbidden by the German Football Association, a ban that was widely defied.