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The Luxembourg women's national football team represents Luxembourg in international women's football. Luxembourg women's national football team was founded in 2003, and played its first international game in 2006. They have been managed by Dan Santos since 2020.
The Dames Ligue 1 (Women's League 1) is Luxembourg's top level women's football (soccer) league.. The league featured a different quantity of teams through the years (eight or ten usually) and since 2023–24 has featured 10 teams that play each other twice to decide the champion.
As of 1 September 2021, the Luxembourg national team adopted Luxembourg City's, Stade de Luxembourg the country's national stadium, as its home venue. Formerly, the team played at the Stade Josy Barthel, where, at counting in August 2015, it had played 235 games, including unofficial matches. [23] It is also used for rugby union and athletics.
This template ({{FIFA Women's World Rankings}}) is meant to help quickly update the FIFA Women's World Rankings for all the ranked women's national teams of FIFA, displayed in the infobox on each national team article. When given a country code, the template outputs the FIFA Women's World Ranking of a country, along with a movement indicator ...
The results of each team's league rankings were used to calculate the overall ranking of the competition, using the ranking criteria, [2] and were used for seeding in the Euro 2025 final tournament draw and the upcoming 2025 Women's Nations League. Teams were promoted or relegated for the next Nations League as indicated.
A women's cup competition started in 2001–02, where the Progrès Niederkorn women's team won the trophy. [9] Luxembourg, as a nation, was affiliated with FIFA in 1910, and then with UEFA in 1954. The first match of the national team was a 1–4 defeat at home to France on 29 October 1910. [10] It was only in 2006 that the national women's ...
After graduating high school in Frisco, Texas, rather than try her hand at collegiate soccer, Shaw went straight to the pros. At 19, she is the youngest player on the U.S. Women’s Olympic roster.
FIFA members are eligible to enter the FIFA Women's World Cup and matches between them are recognized as official international matches. Based on their match results over the previous four-year period, the FIFA Women's World Rankings, published monthly by FIFA, compare the relative strengths of the national teams.