1989 European Competition for Women's Football
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Fußball-Europameisterschaft der Frauen 1989 | |
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Tournament details | |
Host country | West Germany |
Dates | 28 June – 2 July |
Teams | 4 |
Venue(s) | 3 (in 3 host cities) |
Final positions | |
Champions | File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany (1st title) |
Runners-up | File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway |
Third place | File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 4 |
Goals scored | 13 (3.25 per match) |
Attendance | 35,500 (8,875 per match) |
Top scorer(s) | Norway Sissel Grude West Germany Ursula Lohn (2 goals each) |
Best player(s) | West Germany Doris Fitschen |
← 1987 1991 → |
The 1989 European Competition for Women's Football took place in West Germany. It was won by the hosts in a final against defending champions Norway.[1] Again, the competition began with four qualifying groups, but this time the top two countries qualified for a home-and-away quarter final, before the four winners entered the semi-finals in the host nation.[2]
Qualification
Squads
For a list of all squads that played in the final tournament, see 1989 European Competition for Women's Football squads
Bracket
Semi-finals | Final | |||||
28 June – Siegen | ||||||
File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany (p) | 1 (4) | |||||
2 July – Osnabrück | ||||||
File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy | 1 (3) | |||||
File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany | 4 | |||||
28 June – Lüdenscheid | ||||||
File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway | 1 | |||||
File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden | 1 | |||||
File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway | 2 | |||||
Third place play-off | ||||||
30 June – Osnabrück | ||||||
File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy | 1 | |||||
File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden (a.e.t.) | 2 |
Semifinals
Sweden File:Flag of Sweden.svg | 1–2 | File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway |
---|---|---|
Videkull File:Soccerball shade.svg 54' | Report NFF Report (in Norwegian) SvFF Report (in Swedish) Report |
Medalen File:Soccerball shade.svg 1' Grude File:Soccerball shade.svg 52' |
Third place playoff
Sweden File:Flag of Sweden.svg | 2–1 (a.e.t.) | File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy |
---|---|---|
Sundhage File:Soccerball shade.svg 43' H. Johansson File:Soccerball shade.svg 94' |
Report FIGC Report (in Italian) SvFF Report (in Swedish) Report |
Ferraguzzi File:Soccerball shade.svg 28' |
Final
West Germany File:Flag of Germany.svg | 4–1 | File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway |
---|---|---|
Lohn File:Soccerball shade.svg 22', 36' Mohr File:Soccerball shade.svg 45' Fehrmann File:Soccerball shade.svg 73' |
Report DFB Report (in German) NFF Report (in Norwegian) Report |
Grude File:Soccerball shade.svg 54' |
Goalscorers
- 2 goals
- 1 goal
References
- ↑ "1989: Germany arrive in style –". Uefa.com. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
- ↑ "How Women's Euros have evolved". 1 June 2005 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
External links
Categories:
- 1988–89 in European football
- UEFA Women's Championship tournaments
- International women's association football competitions hosted by West Germany
- 1989 in women's association football
- 1988–89 in Italian football
- 1989 in Swedish football
- 1989 in Norwegian football
- June 1989 sports events in Europe
- July 1989 sports events in Europe
- 1988–89 in West German women's football
- 1989 European Competition for Women's Football