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Date Venue Opponents Score Competition Scotland scorers Att. Ref. 4 March 2020: Pinatar Arena, San Pedro del Pinatar (N) Ukraine 3–0 2020 Pinatar Cup: Martha Thomas (2), Claire Emslie
The 2023–24 Scottish Women's Premier League was the 23rd season of the SWPL, the highest division of women's football in Scotland since 2002. Sponsored by ScottishPower , the league was split into two divisions – SWPL 1 with 12 clubs and SWPL 2 with eight clubs.
Jericho is a British period crime drama series, first broadcast as a series of four episodes on ITV from 16 October 2005. The series was written and created by Stewart Harcourt, and starred Robert Lindsay as Detective Inspector Michael Jericho, a Scotland Yard detective who is loved by the public but embarrassed by his status as a hero.
The Scotland women's national football team represents Scotland in international women's football competitions. Since 1998, the team has been governed by the Scottish Football Association (SFA). Scotland qualified for the FIFA Women's World Cup for the first time in 2019 , and for their first UEFA Women's Championship in 2017 .
Jericho is a British period drama television series created and written by Steve Thompson; it was directed by Paul Whittington. [1] The eight-part series premiered on ITV between 7 January and 25 February 2016. The series re-imagines the building of the Ribblehead Viaduct (renamed the Culverdale Viaduct) as a Western-inspired story. [2]
The Scottish Women's Football Championship is the third league tier of women's football in Scotland. Founded in 2020, the Championship replaced the SWFL First Division (SWFL 1) . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The Championship was played in North and South divisions for three seasons until 2022, when it became a single national division with eight clubs.
More than two million viewers watched domestic women's football in Scotland in the last "record-breaking" season - 46% more than the previous campaign.
Women's association football in Scotland has an organised history including the first international women's match in 1881, [1] [2] the president of the British Ladies' Football Club in 1895, Lady Florence Dixie, [2] [3] the Edinburgh–Preston "World Championship" in 1937 [4] and 1939, [5] [6] and the Scottish Women's Cup founded in 1970.