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[20] [21] Akers led the team to the most successful club season in English women's football in the 2006–07 season as the team won every competition available to them, including the UEFA Women's Cup. The win marked Arsenal's only European trophy and was the first time an English club had won the competition. [22]
West Ham United Women 0, Arsenal Women 2. Rosa Kafaji (Arsenal Women) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top left corner. Assisted by Stina Blackstenius.
1.1 First team squad. 1.2 Appearances and goals. 1.3 Goalscorers. ... The 2021–22 season was Arsenal Women's Football Club's 35th season of competitive football.
The club will participate in the Women's Super League, the FA Cup, the League Cup and the Champions League. On 14 May 2024, the club announced that Emirates Stadium will become Arsenal Women’s main home with plans to play a minimum of eight league matches at the stadium, and depending on competition progression, three Champions League matches.
Before the first friendlies in pre-season, the squad saw some changes. Midfielders Viktoria Schnaderbeck, Lia Wälti, defender Tabea Kemme (coming from the German Bundesliga) and goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin (from the French Division 1) joined the squad, while Arsenal legend Alex Scott retired to focus on her media career, Heather O'Reilly moved back to the States and Anna Moorhouse and ...
The club participated in the Champions League, the Women's Super League, the FA Cup and the League Cup. The club were the defending Women's Super League champions. Arsenal were unable to defend their title, finishing third after the season was curtailed early due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. The reached the League Cup Final, where they lost to ...
The 2020–21 season is Arsenal Women's Football Club's 34th season of competitive football.The club participates in the Women's Super League, the FA Cup and the League Cup and will in addition to that compete in the 2019–20 FA Cup and the 2019–20 Champions League, which could not be completed in the previous season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Arsenal is the most successful women' s team in England, having won 15 domestic league titles, and 14 FA Cups. [5] Arsenal is the only English side to win Europe's women's football competition, the UEFA Women's Champions League, having defeated Swedish side Umeå in the 2007 final. [6]