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A total of 23 tournaments have been played: 8 in the Women's Cup era (2001–02 to 2008–09) and 15 in the Champions League era (2009–10 to 2023–24). 8 of the 22 attempts to defend the trophy (36.36%) have been successful, split between 4 teams. These are:
The UEFA Women's Champions League is a women's association football competition established in 2001. [1] It is the only international competition for European women's football clubs. The competition is open to the league champions of all UEFA member associations who run such championships; 46 of UEFA's 53 member associations have entered.
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 ...
However, the competition ran with 23 teams, one fewer than previous season, after Reading withdrew from the Championship in June 2024. [5] Teams competing in the UEFA Women's Champions League group stage are exempt from the League Cup group stage, earning a provisional bye to the quarter-finals. As a result, the initial group stage draw made on ...
The competition became the UEFA Women's Champions League in 2010, [1] with German Bernd Schröder leading Turbine Potsdam to success that year. Six managers have won the title on two occasions: Bernd Schröder , Hans-Jürgen Tritschoks and Ralf Kellermann with German teams, Patrice Lair , Gérard Prêcheur , and Reynald Pedros with French club ...
Unlike the men's Champions League, not every association entered a team, and so the exact number of teams entering in each round could not be determined until the full entry list was known. If there were more than 47 teams in the Champions Path qualifying, a preliminary round of two-legged home-and-away matches would have been played by the ...
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The WFA was founded in November 1969 as the Ladies Football Association of Great Britain, when the main women's football competitions were Regional Leagues.After the English Football Association reversed its 1921 ban on women's games at its grounds, the WFA Cup began in 1970–71, a national competition initially including many clubs outside of England.