Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2024–25 Women's Super League season (also known as the Barclays Women's Super League for sponsorship reasons) will be the 14th season of the Women's Super League (WSL) since it was formed in 2010. [1] It is the sixth season after the rebranding of the four highest levels in English women's football.
The 2024–25 Women's League Cup is the fourteenth edition of the Women's Super League and Women's Championship's league cup competition. All 23 teams from the WSL and Championship contested the competition. Arsenal are the defending champions. [1]
For the first time, the season will end Cloudbreak, in Tavarua, Fiji, will host the WSL Finals to determine the 2025 World Champions. It is the first time the WSL Finals has moved locations since its debut in 2021. [2] John John Florence and Caitlin Simmers are the defending champions from the 2024 season
The 2024 CT season will start with 36 men and 18 women. Halfway through the season, the field will be reduced to 22 men and 10 women. The top-ranked surfers will automatically requalify for the 2025 CT, as well as continue on to the second half of the Tour, where they will be joined by one men's and one women's season-long wildcard, and one men ...
The Gunners start their season on 1 October at home to Liverpool
2024–25 season; Head coach: Robert de Pauw (until 11 December) Shaun Goater (interim, 11 December – 22 January) Natalia Arroyo (from 22 January) Stadium: Villa Park, Aston (league matches) Bescot Stadium, Walsall (cup matches) League Cup: Group stage: Highest home attendance: 4,324 (vs. Chelsea, 2 February 2025) Lowest home attendance: 2,494
The new Women's Super League marks the start of a new era for reigning champions Chelsea, with long-serving boss Emma Hayes having departed in summer to start a new adventure with the USA Women's ...
A shortened bridging season took place, branded as the FA WSL Spring Series, with teams playing each other once from February to May 2017. [15] Following the 2017–18 FA WSL season, WSL 1 was renamed back to the FA Women's Super League, becoming a fully professional league for the first time, with eleven teams for the 2018–19 season.