Division 1 Féminine 2004/05

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The 2004/05 season of Division 1 Féminine was the 31st playing of the French women's football championship since the official recognition of women's football by the FFF, the Football Association of France , in 1970 and the first staging in the 1974/75 season . The Division 1 Féminine called league was in pure League mode played in a group consisting of a single group, comprising twelve teams, national top division.

Last year's winners were the women of HSC Montpellier , who defended the championship and thus won their second title.

The soccer players of the D1F were no longer pure amateurs; rather, the clubs were allowed to reward them financially for practicing their sport, although the maximum possible remuneration was very moderate compared to men's football. There was also a “federal contract” (contrat fédéral) drawn up by the FFF , which regulated the maximum income levels as well as other rights and obligations of clubs and soccer players.

Qualification and mode of competition

For the eligibility to participate, only the performance of the women's teams in the previous season was taken into account; Qualified were the ten best-placed teams of the previous season as well as two promoted teams from Division 2 Féminine , which was divided into two groups, and who had prevailed in the play-offs of the two season first and second. Thus the following twelve participants started this season:

The championship was played in a double round of points in which each participant competed in home and away games against each other. The " modified three-point rule " , which was also common in French amateur football well into the 21st century, applied with four points for a win, two for a draw and one for a defeat won on the field. In the event of a tie, first the direct comparison and then the better overall goal difference , if there was still a tie , the higher number of hits was decisive. At the end of the season, the two bottom of the table had to be relegated and were replaced for the coming season by two promoted players from the second division.

The "championship round" introduced in 1999/2000 , in which the four best-placed women's teams after the end of the regular season had played off the final title winners, had been abolished for this season.

Results, table and course of the season

CNF
Cla
FCF
Con
FCF
H-B
FCF
Juv
Oly
Lyo
HSC
Mon
SG
par
Sta
StB
Oly
StM
ASJ
Soy
FC
Tou
FC
Ven
CNFE Clairefontaine 1-0 3: 1 0-0 5: 1 0: 4 2: 2 5: 2 1-0 0: 2 1: 1 1: 2
FCF Condé-sur-Noireau 0: 4 1: 1 0: 2 0: 4 0: 9 3: 1 1: 1 1: 1 2: 3 0: 3 1: 2
FCF Henin-Beaumont 0: 2 4: 1 3: 4 1: 2 0: 1 1-0 4-0 5: 1 2: 4 2: 2 1: 2
Juvisy FCF 4: 2 1-0 5: 1 1-0 1: 1 1-0 7-0 9: 1 4: 1 6: 1 7: 2
Olympique Lyon 0: 1 3-0 6-0 3-0 0: 4 2-0 5: 1 3: 1 2: 1 1: 1 1: 1
HSC Montpellier 2: 1 0-0 3: 1 1: 1 1-0 2-0 7: 1 5-0 2-0 1-0 4: 2
Paris Saint-Germain FC 0: 4 1: 1 1: 3 0: 4 0: 3 1: 6 3: 2 1: 1 1: 3 1: 2 0-0
Stade Saint-Brieuc 0: 5 1-0 2: 3 0: 3 0: 5 0: 1 3: 3 1: 1 0: 3 1: 6 1: 3
Olympique Saint-Memmie 2: 1 3-0 1: 4 0: 6 0: 2 0: 3 2: 3 3: 6 1: 3 1: 2 4: 1
ASJ Soyaux 1: 1 3: 1 5: 1 0: 6 0: 1 1: 2 1-0 3-0 0: 1 1-0 3-0
Toulouse FC 2-0 5: 1 0: 2 0: 3 2: 4 0: 4 4: 3 2-0 4-0 4-0 0-0
FC Vendenheim 1-0 3-0 0: 2 0: 3 0: 2 0: 5 0: 3 2: 3 0-0 2: 2 0: 3
Pl. Womanhood Sp G U V Gates Diff. Pts.
1. HSC Montpellier (TV) 22nd 19th 3 0 68: 09 82
2. Juvisy FCF 22nd 18th 3 1 78:16 79
3. Olympique Lyon 22nd 15th 2 5 50:20 69
4th ASJ Soyaux 22nd 12 2 8th 40:33 60
5. Toulouse FC 22nd 11 4th 7th 44:32 59
6th CNFE Clairefontaine 22nd 10 4th 8th 40:27 56
7th FCF Henin-Beaumont 22nd 9 2 11 42:46 51
8th. FC Vendenheim (N) 22nd 6th 5 11 23:46 45
9. Olympus. Saint-Memmie 22nd 4th 4th 14th 24:61 38
10. Paris Saint-Germain 22nd 3 5 14th 24:50 36
11. Stade Saint-Brieuc 22nd 3 3 16 25:75 34
12. FCF Condé-sur-N. (N) 22nd 1 5 16 13:56 30th

Juvisy and Montpellier fought head-to-head, in which the players from Île-de-France had a slight advantage until they suffered their only defeat on matchday 16 in Lyon. Juvisy surrendered only one point at home over the entire season, Montpellier managed this feat away - with the two encounters between these teams each ending 1-1. The latter were no longer in danger in front of their own audience until the end of the season and finally won the championship title. The pursuers Lyon, Soyaux and Toulouse had never been able to intervene in this duel. In the midfield, the newcomers from the Strasbourg neighborhood surprised in particular with their away strength; outside of Alsace they had lost only four of their eleven games, and at the end of the season they were able to afford five defeats in a row without being in danger of relegation.

The other newcomer from Condé-sur-Noireau started the season promisingly (a draw and a win), but had only drawn four more afterwards. But there was tension regarding the question of who would have to accompany the Normans in Division 2. Before the kick-off of the 19th matchday, Saint-Memmie (30 points), Paris and Saint-Brieuc (29 each) were almost tied, but only the first two were able to win one of their last four games, so that it was the particularly weak eleven which finally caught Brittany . The relegated women were replaced the following season by USCCO Compiègne and ESOF La Roche from the second division.

The champions' players

Coach Daniel Rey's squad included (number of point games in brackets):

Montpellier scored 68 hits: Ramos 17, Lattaf 16, Abily 9, Bompastor, Faisandier 5 each, Diguelmann, Podence 4 each, Oumeur 2, Calvié, Grand, Lacaze, M'Barek, Rigal 1 each; there was also an own goal.

Most successful goalscorers

Most goals this league season were scored by:

Pl. Surname team Gates
1. Marinette Pichon Juvisy 38
2. Élodie Ramos Montpellier 17th
3. Hoda Lattaf Montpellier 16
4th Séverine Creuzet-Laplantes Lyon 13
Élodie Thomis Clairefontaine 13
6th Laëtitia Tonazzi Juvisy 12
7th Amandine Henry Henin-Beaumont 11
8th. Ingrid Boyeldieu Paris 10
Déborah Jeannet Saint-Memmie 10
10. Camille Abily Montpellier 9
Lilas Traïkia Toulouse 9
12. Sandrine Brétigny Lyon 8th
Amélie Coquet Henin-Beaumont 8th
Candie Herbert Soyaux 8th
Corine Petit Soyaux 8th
CanadaCanada Wanda Rozwadowska Soyaux 8th

See also

Web links

Notes and evidence

  1. according to the mission overview at footofeminin.fr
  2. according to the scorer list at footofeminin.fr