National Championship of Rio Grande do Sul (women's football)
The state championship of Rio Grande do Sul for women's football ( Portuguese Campeonato Gaúcho de Futebol Feminino ) is the club championship in women's football of the state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil , which has been held since 1997 .
history
Although the first women's teams were set up in Gaúcho state as early as the 1980s , a state-owned championship competition was only introduced in 1997 as part of an initiative initiated by the CBF to professionalize Brazilian women's football. As in men's football, the women's championship was immediately dominated by the two top clubs from the capital Porto Alegre , SC Internacional and Grêmio FBPA . This phase of professionalization ended with the withdrawal of the two clubs from women's football in the first few years after the turn of the millennium. The championship was then carried by smaller clubs from within the country or community-sponsored gaming communities, of which the former club active Eduarda "Duda" Marranghello Luizelli, one of the defining figures in women's football in Rio Grande do Sul. Inspired by a renewed professionalization process, which has now also been pushed by the continental association CONMEBOL , Internacional and Grêmio returned to women's football in the 2017 season. In that season, fifteen clubs took part in the competition, placing the Gaúcho championship just behind that of the São Paulo state ( Campeonato Paulista Feminino ), although this is considered to be significantly stronger.
At the beginning, the national championship was organized by the national association Federação Gaúcha de Futebol (FGF) . Since 2010, the organization of the competition has been the responsibility of the Associação Gaúcha de Futebol Feminino (AGFF), which was newly formed specifically for women's football but is still associated with the FGF.
Qualification for the Copa do Brasil Feminino has been decided on the national championship since 2007 and qualification for the second division (Série A2) of the Brazilian championship since 2017 .
Championship history
Honor roll of the winners
Record champions: SC Internacional |
7 wins | SC Internacional ( Porto Alegre ) | |
3 wins |
EC Juventude ( Caxias do Sul ) Grêmio FBPA (Porto Alegre) |
||
2 wins | Duda / Canoas ( Canoas ) | ||
1 win |
EC Pelotas ( Pelotas ) Grêmio Esportivo Torrense ( Torres ) Canoas / Gaúcho FF (Canoas) Flores da Cunha FF ( Flores da Cunha ) Alvorada FF ( Alvorada ) CER Atlântico ( Erechim ) Grêmio Esportivo Onze Unidos ( Cachoeirinha ) |
Chronology of the Masters
See also
- National Championship of Rio Grande do Sul (Men's Football)
Web links
- Associação Gaúcha de Futebol Feminino (AGFF)
- Rio Grande do Sul - Women - List of Champions , RSSSF Brazil .
- Michele Janete Widmar, Futebol Feminino em Porto Alegre-RS, in: Atlas do esporte no Brasil, ed. by Lamartine DaCosta. Rio de Janeiro, 2006. (PDF)
Remarks
- ↑ diariodecanoas.com.br - Duda / Canoas vence o Atlântico e conquista Gaúcho de Futebol Feminino (November 9, 2015), accessed December 12, 2017.
- ↑ globoesporte.globo.com - Canoas / Duda vence Black Show e conquista Gaúcho de futebol feminino (December 19, 2016), accessed on December 12, 2017.
- ↑ Grêmio bate o Inter nos pênaltis e é campeão do Gauchão feminino. In: globoesporte.globo.com. O Globo , December 9, 2018, accessed December 10, 2018 .
- ↑ Em final com jogo único, Inter vence o Gre-Nal em Ijuí e conquista e título Gauchão Feminino. In: globoesporte.globo.com. O Globo , December 1, 2019, accessed December 2, 2019 .