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The 2023 Women's Euro Winners Cup was the eighth edition of the Women's Euro Winners Cup (WEWC), an annual continental beach soccer tournament for women's top-division European clubs. The championship is viewed as beach soccer's rudimentary version of the UEFA Women's Champions League in its parent sport, association football. [1]
The Women's Euro Winners Cup (WEWC) is an annual continental beach soccer club competition contested between top-division European women's teams; ... 2023: Nazar é ...
The two nations were also the finalists of the 1970 Women's World Cup in Italy. Italy hosted another European women's tournament a decade later, the 1979 European Competition for Women's Football – won by Denmark. [6] UEFA displayed little enthusiasm for women's football and were particularly hostile to Italy's independent women's football ...
Some 45,000 fans watched Morocco qualify for the 2023 Women's World Cup. A shoulder-to-shoulder sea of yellow watched Colombia topple Argentina in the Copa America Femenina semis, and give Brazil ...
England renewed their participation in the UEFA Euro 2024 final, held in the Olympiastadion in Berlin, where three–time winners Spain won 2–1 courtesy of a Nico Williams strike at the start of the second half and a 86th-minute winner by Mikel Oyarzabal, after a Cole Palmer equaliser for England. As a result, Spain won a record–breaking ...
The 2022 UEFA European Women's Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Women's Euro 2022 or simply Euro 2022, was the 13th edition of the UEFA Women's Championship, the quadrennial international football championship organised by UEFA for the women's national teams of Europe. It was the second edition since it was expanded to 16 teams.
The men’s Euro 2024 had a total prize fund of 331 million euros ($347 million), from overall revenue of about 2.4 billion euros ($2.5 billion). UEFA more than doubles team prize money for Women ...
Having been selected as host for the UEFA Women's Euro 2022, England automatically qualified as the host nation for the tournament.Throughout the history of the Women's Euro prior to 2022, England's Lionesses have reached the final twice and finished as runner-up on both occasions, first in the inaugural edition in 1984 when they lost to Sweden on penalties and then in 2009, losing 2–6 to ...