ÖFB Women's Bundesliga

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ÖFB Women's Bundesliga
Logo of the ÖFB Women's BundesligaTemplate: Infobox football competition / maintenance / logo format
Association ÖFB
First edition 1972 (Vienna Football Association);
Takeover by the ÖFB in 1982
hierarchy 1st League
Teams 10 teams
master SKN St. Pölten (5th title)
Record champions USC Landhaus Wien and SV Neulengbach (12 titles each)
Current season 2019/20
Website www.oefb.at/oefb-frauen.bundesliga
Qualification for since 2016/17 UEFA Women's Champions League :
2 clubs

The ÖFB Women's Bundesliga (that's how it is spelled) is the top division in Austrian women's football . Women's football was already played in Austria in 1936. A championship has been held since 1972. The ÖFB Women's Bundesliga has been played with ten teams since 2010.

The Bundesliga is structured in a league system in which every club competes against every other club in a return match. The ÖFB Women's Bundesliga champion has been eligible to participate in the UEFA Women's Champions League since 2001, the runner-up in the meantime for 2013/14 and since 2016/17 . The current master is the SKN St. Pölten .

Mode and Orientation

Competition mode

During a championship year, which is divided into a round-trip round, all ten Bundesliga clubs meet twice, once in their own stadium and once in the opponent's stadium. A football season with 18 game days usually extends from August or September to May or June.

The team that took first place at the end of the season are Austrian champions and take part in the UEFA Women's Champions League for Austria . The runner-up in the meantime for 2013 and since 2016, entitled to participate in the UEFA Women's Champions League. The team placed last must either be in the 2nd division , either in the 2nd division Middle / West for the clubs of the federal states of Upper Austria, Salzburg, Tyrol or Vorarlberg or in the 2nd division East / South for the clubs from Burgenland, Carinthia, Lower Austria , Styria or Vienna, descend.

In the event of a tie, the better goal difference first decides on the order of placement; if the difference is the same, then the number of goals scored. If this comparison still does not result in a decision, the following criteria are used: the total result from the games against each other, the number of goals scored in these games against each other, the number of goals scored away in direct comparison. Then the away goals scored decide in all games. If these comparisons are of no use, a decision game is played in a neutral place. However, this has never been the case in the Bundesliga.

Mode changes

In the early days of the women's league, 1972 until 1979, there was only one performance level, the women's league east. In the 1979/80 season a second performance level with the same name was introduced. From 1982 took over the alignment of the ÖFB and continued the two leagues. At the beginning of the 1990s, some federal state associations organized state championships for women's football. The first cross-national championship, apart from the women's league east founded in the east, was the Regionalliga West, in which Tyrolean and Vorarlberg women's football teams took part, later the 2nd division middle (2001) and the 2nd division south (2001) were added. From this point in time, the champions of the 2nd division could be promoted directly, from 2005 the first relegation between the champions of the 2nd division east and the champions of the 2nd division center was played. The champions of the Regionalliga West did not want to participate in the relegation due to financial reasons. In the 2009/10 season the 2nd division Middle / East was founded, two years later the 2nd division East / South. Since then, a relegation between the two second division champions has been held.

Host

The Bundesliga is organized by the ÖFB , which takes care of implementation, licensing and refereeing.

Name history

The Austrian Women's Soccer League has changed its name several times in its history, mostly to emphasize a certain innovation in the system. As early as the 1930s, a women's football championship was held under the name ÖDFU-Liga. In the 1970s, the Vienna Football Association founded the predecessor of the current Austrian women's league under the name Damenliga Ost . Ten years later this was taken over by the Austrian Football Association and continued as the women's Bundesliga . From 2005 the ÖFB changed the top division to the ÖFB Women's League , two years later the clubs played the championship for three years in a play-off system. At the request of the first division clubs, the 2013 division was renamed the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga . From the 2018/19 season, for the first time in the history of the women's Bundesliga, a sponsor could be won with the Voarlberg-based detergent and cleaning agent Planet Pure.

  • 1936 to 1938: ÖDFU League
  • 1972/73: Ladies League East - 1st level under the WFV
  • 1982/83: Women's Bundesliga under the ÖFB
  • 2002/03: Bundesliga women
  • 2005/06: ÖFB Women's League
  • 2007/08: ÖFB Women's League (play-off)
  • 2010/11: ÖFB Women's League
  • 2013/14: ÖFB Women's Bundesliga
  • 2018/19: Planet Pure Women's Bundesliga

history

Women's football in the First Republic (1923–1938)

ÖDU: ÖDFU League
season master
1936
DFC Austria Vienna
DFC Austria Vienna
1937
DFC Austria Vienna
DFC Austria Vienna
1938 Season was not finished

Austria originally played a pioneering role in the history of women's football. As early as 1923, Ferdinand Swatosch , the star striker of Vienna Austria , called for the establishment of a women's team. A total of over 150 players signed up. A few months later, on April 13, 1924, a two-week theory course was held with 43 women and Austria's first all-women football club, Diana, was founded. In mid-1924, reporting on the women's association subsided.

Austrian women's football reached its first peak in the 1930s. In 1935 the Austrian Women's Football Union , or ÖDU or DFU for short, was founded, which endeavored to organize its own championship for women. The first championship was held in 1936 with nine clubs from the Vienna area, with the clubs' home games being attended by an average of 3,000 spectators. This development went against the political leadership of Austria at the time, which was fundamentally opposed to sporting activities by women. The premature end of Austrian women's football came in 1938 with the annexation by the German Reich .

Revival and the introduction of the championship (1968–1982)

WFV: Ladies League East - 1st level
season master
1972/73
Coats of arms of None.svg
Favoritner AC
1973/74
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1974/75
Coats of arms of None.svg
KSV Ankerbrot Vienna
1975/76
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1976/77
FS Elektra Vienna
FS Elektra Vienna
1977/78
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1978/79
FS Elektra Vienna
SV Elektra Vienna
1979/80
FS Elektra Vienna
SV Elektra Vienna
1980/81
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1981/82
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna

The suppression of women's sports during the National Socialist era continued to have an effect long after the end of the war. In 1957 the ÖFB also banned women's departments. At the end of the 1960s there was, however, a revival of women's football in Austria. The USC Landhaus Wien was founded in 1968 as one of the first teams . Since women's football was still in its infancy after its revival and there were no opponents for the Viennese women in Austria, the club initially only played friendly matches against foreign teams, especially against strong clubs from what was then Czechoslovakia . The official game operation of the country house ladies took place on January 1, 1969, and it was accepted as the first women's team in the Vienna Football Association in 1971.

Spurred on by the example of the USC Landhaus, numerous women's teams were founded within a few years, especially in the Vienna area, which found their way into existing and well-known men's clubs as separate sections. After a steady increase in women's teams, the Vienna Football Association announced an Austrian championship in women's football for the first time since the 1930s. In addition to the USC Landhaus, the founding members of the East Women's League included the Favoritner AC , DFC Ostbahn XI , SV Kagran , SV Antonshof and the Gersthofer Sportvereinigung . The favorite AC made history as the first champion after the reactivation of women's football in Austria. At the same time, a trophy competition for women's clubs was introduced, which found its first winner at the USC country house. Due to the steadily growing number of participants - in 1979 clubs from Vienna, Lower Austria, Styria and Burgenland took part in the championship - a second level was introduced in the same year. 1980 was based in Linz with the Union Kleinmünchen the first major all-female football club Austria in the Second Republic.

Takeover by the ÖFB and development until today (1982-today)

ÖFB: Women's Bundesliga
season master
1982/83
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1983/84
Coats of arms of None.svg
SV Aspern
1984/85
Coats of arms of None.svg
DFC Ostbahn XI
1985/86
1. DFC Leoben
1. DFC Leoben
1986/87
1. DFC Leoben
1. DFC Leoben
1987/88
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1988/89
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1989/90
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1990/91
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1991/92
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1992/93
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1993/94
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1994/95
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1995/96
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1996/97
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
1997/98
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1998/99
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen
1999/2000
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
2000/01
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna
2001/02
Innsbruck AC
Innsbruck AC

In 1982 the Austrian Football Association took charge of the women's league and continued to run it as the women's league with two levels. While women's football has developed rapidly in eastern Austria since the early 1970s and spawned a large number of clubs, interest in this sport in western Austria only rose steadily in the early 1990s. The first club to have its own women's section was FC Wacker Innsbruck . The women's clubs from the west did not take part in the national championship because of the high travel costs for away games and because of the mostly small club budgets; instead, until the mid-1990s, they only played in their own national leagues or in the western league jointly run by the regional associations of Tyrol and Vorarlberg. Wacker Innsbruck and Innsbrucker AC proved that at least individual teams in western Austria could compete with those of the Bundesliga by winning the cup competitions in 1985 and 1994. From the 1997/98 season, the western Austrian teams were eligible to play in the women's Bundesliga for the first time. The first club from the west was Innsbrucker AC, later Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz was added, which played in Austria's top division.

In the 70s and 80s, USC Landhaus was the dominant team and won 8 championship titles in this period. Nevertheless, there was the first master from the federal states at this time. DFC Leoben became national champions in 1986 and 1987. From 1990 the competition grew mainly from Union Kleinmünchen. The Linz women won no fewer than 8 championship titles in the 1990s and questioned the previous predominance of the Viennese women. But towards the end of the last millennium and at the beginning of the 21st century, Landhaus was able to assert itself again and set a record with a total of 12 championship titles. After the Innsbruck AC, which won the championship title in 2002, SV Neulengbach's big time came.

Serial winner Neulengbach
ÖFB: Bundesliga women
season master
2002/03
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2003/04
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2004/05
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
ÖFB: ÖFB women's league
2005/06
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2006/07
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
ÖFB: ÖFB Women's League (Play-off)
2007/08
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2008/09
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2009/10
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
ÖFB: ÖFB women's league
2010/11
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2011/12
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2012/13
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach

In the 2000/2001 season, a hierarchy was taken into account with the introduction of the 2nd Middle Division, which arose from the merger of the regional leagues of Upper Austria and Salzburg. In 2003, the 2nd performance level was expanded with the 2nd divisions South and West. The last reform was carried out in the summer of 2011 and since the 2011/12 season the second level has only been available in two separate divisions. The 2nd league east / south plays with the clubs from the federal states of Vienna, Lower Austria, Burgenland, Styria and Carinthia. The 2nd division middle / west includes the clubs of the federal states of Upper Austria, Salzburg, Tyrol and Vorarlberg. The 3rd performance level are the women's national leagues, which each national association conducts itself. At the request of the participating clubs in the top performance level, this has been called the ÖFB Women's Bundesliga again since the 2013/14 season.

From 2003 the Wienerwald team succeeded one title after the other. Up to 2012 no less than 10 double successes in a row and up to 2014 even 12 championship titles in a row. There are two record champions today: USC Landhaus and SV Neulengbach, who are ahead of the statistics with twelve championship titles.

Serial winner St. Pölten
ÖFB: ÖFB Women's Bundesliga
season master
2013/14
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach
2014/15
FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern
FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern
2015/16
FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern
FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern
2016/17
SKN St. Pölten
SKN St. Pölten
2017/18
SKN St. Pölten
SKN St. Pölten
ÖFB: Planet Pure Women's Bundesliga
2018/19
SKN St. Pölten
SKN St. Pölten
2019/20 Cancellation, no evaluation

With the 2014/15 season, the successful run of Neulengbach will end and FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern will be champions for the first time and in the following season 2015/16 the St. Pölten women could repeat the title, shortly before the club as a women's division in the SKN St. Pölten was incorporated. The St. Pölten women have always won the Austrian championship title in recent years.

International success

UEFA Women's Cup

Since the 2001/02 season, the Austrian champions were eligible to participate in the UEFA Women's Cup , although in the first few years the participating teams only reached the preliminary or qualifying rounds.

2001/02 was USC Landhaus Wien represented the first Austrian team in this competition. In Finland there were three defeats in three games in the preliminary round. The following year , the Innsbruck AC was the representative from Austria. The Tyrolean women organized this preliminary round and they had to accept three defeats in three games. In the summer / autumn of 2003 Neulengbach was there for the first time, but due to the defeats of USC Landhaus and the IAC in the two previous seasons, the Wienerwaldverein had to go to the first qualifying round and in Macedonia there were three wins from three games. In the preliminary round, Neulengbach achieved the first victory of an Austrian team in the main competition. There they had to make do with 3rd place (behind Frankfurt, Athletic Club / Spain). In the 2004/05 season Neulengbach finished second behind Montpellier and was eliminated in the qualifying round despite two wins. In 2005/06 they made it back to the second qualifying round, as Neulengbach won all three games in Croatia. In Montpellier, Neulengbach again had to take note of the strength of the European top class from Potsdam, Montpellier and Saestum and lost all three games. In August 2006, could Neulengbach first self-host the first qualifying round. With the Icelandic representative Breidablik an overpowering opponent was on the spot, so that the victories against União Dezembro (Portugal) and Newtownabbey (Ireland) did not lead to promotion to the second qualifying round. In the 2007/08 season , Neulengbach againhostedthe first qualifying round and in the Wienerwaldstadion, they were promoted to the second round against Hibernian (Scotland), Częstochowa (Poland), Mayo (Ireland). In this round in London Neulengbach lost to Arsenal and Verona, but there was a win against Alma (Kazakhstan), but it was still the farewell to this competition. For the 2008/09 was Neulengbach operators in the first qualifying round and won superior and clean sheet against Novo Mesto, SU Dezembro and Vamos Idaliou. The second round was played in Lyon and after defeats against Lyon and Arsenal Neulengbach won against Zurich and reached third place in the group. Due to the good results of SV Neulengbach in this competition, the Austrians were seeded for the first main round and did not have to play any more qualifying games.

UEFA Women's Champions League

Since 2009/10 the competition has been called the Women's Champions League and this year they made it to the sixteenth-finals against Unia Raciborz. In the round of 16 Neulengbach lost to Torres 1: 4 and 1: 4. In 2010/11 the Greek club PAOK Thessaloniki was the opponent (0: 1, 3: 0) and in the round of 16 they ended up with Potsdam. The first live TV broadcast of a UEFA Champions League game for women in Austria was on November 10, 2010 via Eurosport from Neulengbach (SV Neulengbach versus Turbine Potsdam).

In the 2011/12 season they made it to the round of 16. After the games against Kairat Almaty (1: 2, 5: 0) SV Neulengbach played very good encounters against Malmö, but with 1: 3 and 0: 1 the Austrian representative had to say goodbye to this competition. In the 2012/13 season Neulengbach played in the first main round against the Romanian champions CFF Olimpia Cluj and had to say goodbye after two draws from the competition. In Transylvania, the Austrian champions played 1: 1 and in Neulengbach in the Wienerwaldstadion in front of 1,150 spectators 2: 2 after extra time.

Due to the UEFA five-year ranking, two clubs from Austria were allowed to play in the 2013/14 season . In addition to the series champion Neulengbach , the runner-up, FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern , was there this time. The team from the Lower Austrian capital was drawn from ASD Torres from Sardinia. After a home 2: 2 at St. Pöltner Voith-Platz, the team had to admit defeat 1: 3 away and was eliminated from the competition. The greatest success of an Austrian women's team to date was achieved by Neulengbach. In the first round there was a 2-1 away win and with a 1-1 home draw against Apollon Limassol (Cyprus), the team rose to the last sixteen. It was a masterpiece: against Konak Izmir Neulengbach won 3-0 at home and away. Especially Nina Burger stood out from the team as she scored three goals in Izmir and one goal at home. For the first time, Neulengbach is among the top eight teams in Europe, in the quarter-finals. With the Swedish representative, Neulengbach got one of the Champions League favorites. The decision was made in the first leg. The Scandinavians won 8-1 in Tyresö. Neulengbach didn't stand a chance. Different in the home game. The Austrian champions were well adjusted this time and could stand up to the Swedes and wrest a 0-0. Both quarter-finals were broadcast live by ORF Sport +. In addition, Neulengbach was able to convince many football fans, because with 1,255 spectators there was a record number of spectators in the Wienerwaldstadion on Saturday, March 29, 2014 despite the live broadcast. For Austria it was another important success for women's football. In the following year Neulengbach made it back to the second round. After a 2-1 win in Hungary at MTK Hungaria, Neulengbach managed a 2-2 draw after extra time in Neulengbach and thus the promotion to the top 16 in Europe. The Lower Austrians lost against the reigning CL winner Wolfsburg. At home 0: 4 and away 0: 7 ensured the clear exit from this competition.

After 12 years of dominance in Austrian women's football from Neulengbach, FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern won the championship title in 2015 and thus obtained the right to participate in the 2015/16 Champions League . The St. Pölten women were lucky, because instead of a representative from Germany, France, Sweden, England or Russia, the Italian representative Verona was drawn. After two very good games, however, the Austrian champions had to admit defeat 4: 5 and 2: 2. For the UEFA 5-year ranking, this elimination was more than regrettable. It was similar in the 2016/17 season . Against Brøndby IF (DEN) they lost 2-0 at home and 2-2 away and thus SKN St. Pölten women were eliminated from the competition. This season, due to a UEFA change (now 12 top nations), the second of the Austrian Women's Bundesliga was allowed to take part in the Women's Champions League. Sturm Graz played as runner-up against FC Zurich , the Styrians had no chance with 6-0 at home and 3-0 away. In the 2017/18 season , Sturm Graz failed in the qualifying round, while SKN St. Pölten was drawn into the first main round (1/16 final). There Manchester City WFC won 6-0 overall. With the defeats in the 2018/19 season by SKN St. Pölten against Paris St. Germain (1: 4, 0: 2) in the first round and the failure of USC Landhaus in the qualifying round, it is finally certain that Austria will 2. Participants lose from 2020/21 and the Austrian champions then have to start again in the qualifying round. The first victory in the Champions League of SKN St. Pölten in the 2019/20 season was gratifying, because the team from the Lower Austrian capital won 2-1 against Twente Enschede, but the team lost with a total score of 4: 5 off. The Austrian champions will start in the qualifying round from next season.

Balance sheet of Austrian clubs

season Representative Preliminary round / qualification Group stage KO phase
UEFA Women's Cup
2001/02 USC Landhaus Vienna no 4th place (0 points) = Top 32
2002/03 Innsbruck AC no 4th place (0 points) = Top 32
2003/04 SV Neulengbach 1st place (9 points) 3rd place (3 points) = Top 32
2004/05 SV Neulengbach 2nd place (6 points) = qualification round not reached
2005/06 SV Neulengbach 1st place (7 points) 4th place (0 points) = top 16
2006/07 SV Neulengbach 2nd place (6 points) = qualification round not reached
2007/08 SV Neulengbach 1st place (9 points) 3rd place (3 points) = top 16
2008/09 SV Neulengbach 1st place (9 points) 3rd place (3 points) = top 16


season Representative qualification KO phase
UEFA Women's Champions League
2009/09 SV Neulengbach no Round of 16 reached
2010/11 SV Neulengbach no Round of 16 reached
2011/12 SV Neulengbach no Round of 16 reached
2012/13 SV Neulengbach no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
2013/14 SV Neulengbach no Quarterfinals reached
FSK St. Pölten no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
2014/15 SV Neulengbach no Round of 16 reached
2015/16 FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
2016/17 FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
SK Sturm Graz no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
2017/18 SKN St. Pölten no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
SK Sturm Graz 2nd place (6 points) KO phase not reached
2018/19 SKN St. Pölten no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
SG USC Landhaus / FK Austria Vienna 3rd place (3 points) KO phase not reached
2019/20 SKN St. Pölten no Eliminated in the sixteenth finals
SK Sturm Graz 3rd place (3 points) KO phase not reached

societies

Participants in the 2019/20 season

Only with Carinthia and Upper Austria , two federal states do not have a football team in the highest Austrian league in the 2019/20 season.

Club renaming and transferring

In the course of the history of the Bundesliga there were more frequent club renaming and transfer. Some clubs started their own business and left their parent clubs. Most of the time, the clubs hoped for better marketing opportunities.

Here is an overview

  • 1996: SV Altlengbach> SV Neulengbach (change of club)
  • 1997: First Vienna FC> FC Hellas Kagran (club change)
  • 2002: SC Stattersdorf> ASV Spratzern (change of club)
2013: ASV Spratzern> FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern (new independent association)
2016: FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern> SKN St. Pölten (takeover)
  • 2002: SC Pinkafeld> FC Südburgenland (new independent club)
  • 2002: Union Kleinmünchen Linz II> Ladies Soccer Club Linz (new independent club)
2006: Ladies Soccer Club Linz> LASK Ladies (takeover)
  • 2006: Innsbrucker AC> FC Wacker Innsbruck (takeover)
  • 2008: Schönberger LUV II> FC Stattegg (change of club)
2011: FC Stattegg> SK Sturm Graz (takeover)
  • 2011: JSV Mariatrost> LUV Graz II
  • 2011: SC Röthis> RW Rankweil (change of club)
  • 2012: FC Sulz> (RW Rankweil)> FFC Vorderland (new independent club)
  • 2013: SV St. Veit / Glan> Carinthian Woman Soccer (new independent club)
  • 2015: USK Hof> FC Bergheim (change of club)

Women's football in the Austrian media

2006
In 2006 there was only continuous reporting in a few media; on television, for example, a few selected games are briefly broadcast by the Viennese television station W24 .
2010/11 season
The first women's game to be broadcast live in Austria was a UEFA Women's Champions League game between Neulengbach and Potsdam, which was broadcast by Eurosport on November 10, 2010 from the Wienerwaldstadion Neulengbach.
2012/13 season
The games of the Bundesliga club FFC Vorderland , which was founded in 2012, are continuously broadcast live by the regional broadcaster Ländle-TV. There is a media partnership with the regional gazette. The largest daily newspaper in Vorarlberg, the Vorarlberger Nachrichten and the Vorarlberger Kronenzeitung report every Monday on the game results of the women from the frontier and announce the games of the Bundesliga club in detail.
After founding the new channel ORF SPORT + , ORF began broadcasting women's international matches live from Austria in autumn 2012. The important European Championship qualifier against Denmark on September 15, 2012 in St. Pölten and the play-off game for the final in Sweden against Russia on October 21, 2012 were broadcast.
2013/14, 2014/15 and 2015/16 season
In March 2014, the quarter-finals of the Champions League between Neulengbach and Tyresö led to further live broadcasts on ORF Sport +. In the 2014/15 and 2015/16 seasons, neither an ÖFB Cup final nor Champions League games were broadcast. In contrast, almost all CL games are broadcast live abroad, e.g. B. the game MTK against Neulengbach and the away game in Wolfsburg (Eurosport).
Season 2016/17
Women's international matches are almost always broadcast live and in autumn 2016 there was a direct broadcast on ORF Sport + for the first time from the Champions League matches in the first round of the two Austrian clubs SKN St. Pölten and Sturm Graz.
In May 2017, an ÖFB Ladies Cup final was broadcast live via ORF Sport + for the first time. The EM in the Netherlands was a success. ORF 1 broadcast all Austria games and had more than 1 million viewers per game, including the semi-finals against Denmark.
Season 2017/18
A women's soccer magazine was broadcast on ORF Sport + on September 18, 2017. For the first time, an ÖFB women's Bundesliga match (USC Landhaus - SKN St. Pölten, 0: 1) was broadcast live via ORF Sport + on Sunday, November 12, 2017.
Season 2018/19
After losing the rights to broadcast the men's soccer Bundesliga live , ORF is increasingly broadcasting women's soccer, including 10 ÖFB women's Bundesliga games on ORF Sport +. The first game of the season that was broadcast live was the game SK Sturm Graz vs. SKN St. Pölten in the first round. Furthermore, the games SV Neulengbach against SK Sturm Graz, SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien against SK Sturm Graz, SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien against SV Neulengbach, SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien against SKN St. Pölten, SKN St. Pölten against SK Sturm Graz, SK Sturm Graz versus SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien, FC Wacker Innsbruck versus SKN St. Pölten and SKN St. Pölten versus SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien transfer.
The final of the ÖFB Ladies Cup SKN St. Pölten against SG USC Landhaus / Austria Wien on June 8, 2019 was also broadcast.
As part of the 2017/2018 UEFA Champions League, ORF broadcast the match between SKN St. Pölten and Paris Saint-Germain.
Season 2019/20

Each game is recorded by the and made available for analysis. A goal show is put together from this recording and broadcast on an OFB TV channel. ORF Sport + will have its own women's soccer magazine every Friday, which will be broadcast every Friday at 9:15 p.m., and there will be a live game every round, starting with the first round of SV Neulengbach against SK Sturm Graz.

statistics

Austrian champion

rank society total DFU WFV ÖFB
1
SV Neulengbach
SV Neulengbach 12 12
  ÖFB : 2002/03, 2003/04, 2004/05, 2005/06, 2006/07, 2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10, 2010/11, 2011/12, 2012/13, 2013/14
USC Landhaus Vienna
USC Landhaus Vienna 12 5 7th
  WFV : 1973/74, 1975/76, 1977/78, 1980/81, 1981/82, ÖFB : 1982/83, 1987/88, 1988/89, 1994/95, 1996/97, 1999/2000, 2000 / 01
3
Union Kleinmünchen
Union Kleinmünchen 8th 8th
   ÖFB : 1989/90, 1990/91, 1991/92, 1992/93, 1993/94, 1995/96, 1997/98, 1998/99
4th FSK St. Pölten 5 5
FSK St. Pölten
as FSK St. Pölten 2 2
  ÖFB : 2014/15, 2015/16
SKN St. Pölten
as SKN St. Pölten 3 3
  ÖFB : 2016/17, 2017/18, 2018/19
5
FS Elektra Vienna
FS Elektra Vienna 3 3
  WFV : 1976/77, 1978/79, 1979/80
6th
1. DFC Leoben
1. DFC Leoben 2 2
  ÖFB : 1985/86, 1986/87
DFC Austria Vienna
DFC Austria Vienna 1 2 2
  DFU : 1936, 1937
8th
Innsbruck AC
Innsbruck AC 1 1
  ÖFB : 2001/02
Coats of arms of None.svg
DFC Ostbahn XI 1 1
  ÖFB : 1984/85
Coats of arms of None.svg
SV Aspern 1 1
  ÖFB : 1983/84
Coats of arms of None.svg
KSV Ankerbrot Vienna 1 1
  WFV : 1974/75
Coats of arms of None.svg
Favoritner AC 1 1
  WFV : 1972/73
1 The championship titles of DFC Austria Wien are not officially included because they were played under the Austrian Women's Football Union.

List of top scorer queens since 1997

season Surname society Gates Age
1997/98 Gertrud Stallinger Union Kleinmünchen 20th 31
1998/99 Gertrud Stallinger Union Kleinmünchen 14th 32
1999/00 Nina Aigner USC country house 27 19th
2000/01 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 33 17th
2001/02 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 34 18th
2002/03 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 28 19th
2003/04 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 26th 20th
2004/05 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 22nd 21st
2005/06 Rosana dos Santos Augusto SV Neulengbach 26th 24
2006/07 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 38 19th
2007/08 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 33 20th
2008/09 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 23 21st
2009/10 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 22nd 22nd
2010/11 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 29 23
2011/12 Nina Burger SV Neulengbach 28 24
2012/13 Maria Gstöttner SV Neulengbach 36 29
2013/14 Nicole Billa FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern 24 18th
2014/15 Nicole Billa FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern 27 19th
2015/16 Fanny Vágó FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern 19th 25th
2016/17 Fanny Vágó SKN St. Pölten 21st 26th
2017/18 Fanny Vágó SKN St. Pölten 18th 27
2018/19 Fanny Vágó SKN St. Pölten 24 28

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Diana Women's Football Club on geschichtewiki. In: geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at. Retrieved July 30, 2019 .
  2. The History of Women's Football. In: sportland.nrw.de. Retrieved July 30, 2019 .
  3. Women's football on history wiki. In: geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at. Retrieved July 30, 2019 .
  4. Kick it like Schnaderbeck. In: profil.at. Retrieved July 30, 2019 .
  5. The other association. In: ballesterer.at. Retrieved July 30, 2019 .
  6. An overview of all ÖFB champions in the women's league. (No longer available online.) In: oefb.at. Archived from the original on August 2, 2013 ; Retrieved August 4, 2013 .
  7. ^ A b SV Neulengbach - the story !, the success story of the women's team, live TV broadcast, record attendance. In: neulengbach.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  8. The hope for an EM ticket is alive. In: orf.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  9. Football Women's European Championship Qualification: Russia - Austria. In: orf.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  10. UEFA Champions League: Despite a draw from St. Pölten in Denmark, out in the first round! In: neulengbach.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  11. 43rd ÖFB Ladies Cup Final 2017: SKN St. Pölten - NÖSV Neulengbach. In: neulengbach.at. Retrieved August 10, 2018 .
  12. Women's European Championship semi-finals Austria - Denmark live. In: orf.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  13. Kick-off for the “Frauen-Fußball-Magazin” on September 18 in ORF Sport +. In: orf.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  14. ORF SPORT + with the women's Bundesliga: USC Landhaus - SKN St. Pölten Women. In: ots.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  15. A new "football" era begins on ORF, women's football. In: kurier.at. Retrieved August 15, 2018 .
  16. ORF SPORT + with the live broadcast of the Planet Pure women's Bundesliga game SK Sturm Graz - SKN St. Pölten Women, August 18, 2018. In: ots.at. Retrieved August 19, 2018 .
  17. ORF TV-Live from the Wienerwaldstadion: Women's game SV Neulengbach - Sturm Graz !, September 8, 2018. In: neulengbach.at. Retrieved September 23, 2018 .
  18. ^ Women's Bundesliga: SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna - SK Sturm Graz, 23 September 2018. In: orf.at. Retrieved September 23, 2018 .
  19. Women's Bundesliga game SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna - SV Neulengbach, October 21, 2018. In: orf.at. Retrieved October 21, 2018 .
  20. Women's Bundesliga game: SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna - SKN St. Pölten Women, November 4, 2018. In: orf.at. Retrieved November 4, 2018 .
  21. Women's Bundesliga game: SKN St. Pölten Women - SK Sturm Graz, March 17, 2019. In: orf.at. Retrieved March 17, 2019 .
  22. Women's Bundesliga game: SK Sturm Graz - SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna, April 28, 2019. In: orf.at. Accessed May 1, 2019 .
  23. Women's Bundesliga game: FC Wacker Innsbruck - SKN St. Pölten Women, May 12, 2019. In: orf.at. Accessed May 1, 2019 .
  24. Women's Bundesliga game: SKN St. Pölten Women - SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna, June 2, 2019. In: orf.at. Accessed May 31, 2019 .
  25. Football ÖFB Ladies Cup: SKN St. Pölten Women - SG USC Landhaus / Austria Vienna, June 8, 2019. In: orf.at. Accessed May 31, 2019 .
  26. UEFA Champions League 2018/2019, 1st round, 12/13, 26/27 September 2018. In: neulengbach.at. Retrieved September 23, 2018 .
  27. #mitHerz - Planet Pure Women's Bundesliga starts with many innovations. In: oefb.at. August 12, 2019, accessed August 17, 2019 .
  28. LIVE Planet Pure Football Women's Bundesliga. In: oefb.at. Retrieved August 17, 2019 .