Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
04/19 18:00 | 4 | [4] リールストロムSK女子 v アルナ・ビョルナー女子 [10] | 3-0 |
04/19 17:05 | 4 | [7] オサネ女子 v ローゼンボリ女子 [1] | 0-3 |
04/19 17:00 | 4 | [2] ヴァレレンガ女子 v スターベク女子 [6] | 4-1 |
04/19 16:30 | 4 | [9] リン・フットボール女子 v ルーア女子 [5] | 1-0 |
04/19 16:30 | 4 | [8] アヴァルズネス女子 v SKブラン女子 [3] | 0-0 |
04/15 14:45 | 3 | [3] ヴァレレンガ女子 v アヴァルズネス女子 [6] | 4-0 |
04/15 13:00 | 3 | [8] オサネ女子 v アルナ・ビョルナー女子 [10] | 2-0 |
04/15 13:00 | 3 | [4] ローゼンボリ女子 v ルーア女子 [2] | 1-0 |
04/15 13:00 | 3 | リン・フットボール女子 v スターベク女子 | 0-2 |
04/15 13:00 | 3 | [2] リールストロムSK女子 v SKブラン女子 [5] | 0-0 |
04/01 14:45 | 2 | [7] スターベク女子 v リールストロムSK女子 [2] | 0-0 |
04/01 13:00 | 2 | [2] ルーア女子 v ヴァレレンガ女子 [1] | 3-3 |
04/01 13:00 | 2 | [8] アヴァルズネス女子 v リン・フットボール女子 [6] | 2-1 |
04/01 13:00 | 2 | アルナ・ビョルナー女子 v ローゼンボリ女子 | 0-1 |
04/01 13:00 | 2 | SKブラン女子 v オサネ女子 | 3-2 |
03/25 15:45 | 1 | [3] ヴァレレンガ女子 v アルナ・ビョルナー女子 [3] | 5-0 |
03/25 14:00 | 1 | オサネ女子 v ルーア女子 | 0-4 |
03/25 14:00 | 1 | ローゼンボリ女子 v スターベク女子 | 3-0 |
03/25 14:00 | 1 | リールストロムSK女子 v アヴァルズネス女子 | 4-0 |
03/25 14:00 | 1 | リン・フットボール女子 v SKブラン女子 | 1-2 |
10/30 12:00 | 6 | [4] スターベク女子 v ローゼンボリ女子 [3] | 1-2 |
10/30 12:00 | 6 | [1] SKブラン女子 v ヴァレレンガ女子 [2] | 1-1 |
10/23 13:00 | 5 | ヴァレレンガ女子 v スターベク女子 | 6-0 |
10/23 12:00 | 6 | ルーア女子 v リールストロムSK女子 | 2-2 |
10/23 12:00 | 6 | アルナ・ビョルナー女子 v アヴァルズネス女子 | 3-1 |
10/23 12:00 | 5 | [3] ローゼンボリ女子 v SKブラン女子 [1] | 1-2 |
10/23 12:00 | 6 | オサネ女子 v リンウィメン | 0-2 |
10/16 14:00 | 4 | [1] SKブラン女子 v スターベク女子 [4] | 3-0 |
10/16 13:00 | 5 | [5] アヴァルズネス女子 v リールストロムSK女子 [6] | 0-2 |
10/16 13:00 | 5 | コルボトンウィメン v オサネ女子 | 0-1 |
The Toppserien is the top level of women's association football in Norway. It was founded in 1984.
Women's league football was introduced on a county basis in 1977. These leagues acted as qualification for the regional (South) league in 1979. Regional leagues were in operation until the formation of the First Division 1984, when the league was divided into three regions, Group Eastern-Norway (Østlandet), Group Western-Norway (Vestlandet), and Group Mid-Norway (Trøndelag). No teams from Northern-Norway (Nord-Norge) played, however. The winners of the three groups met each other for a play-off. Regional leagues for women had been played before 1984, and a championship play-off had been done between the winners of Mid-Norway and Eastern-Norway in 1983 (Trondheims-Ørn beat Setskog 2-1), but this championship was considered unofficial by the Football Association of Norway. In 1986, a group for Northern-Norway was added, and in 1987, the groups and play-off matches were dropped, and one single league with teams from all over the country was played.
The league was known as 1. divisjon (Norwegian for 1st Division) from 1984 to 1995, the Eliteserien (Norwegian for The Elite League) from 1996 to 1999, and the Toppserien (Norwegian for The Top League) from 2000.
Traditionally, Trondheims-Ørn and Asker was the two power-houses of Toppserien, with 7 and 6 championship wins respectively. Trondheims-Ørn finished in the top three 16 out of 23 times from the beginning in 1984 to their current last medal in 2006. In 1998, Asker managed the almost unthinkable, winning every single one of their 18 league games that season (Asker didn't win the double that season, however, as the club was knocked out of the semi-finals of the cup by Trondheims-Ørn). However Asker FK, the women's team within Asker Fotball, became bankrupt at the end of 2008 and most of the players were transferred to a new team within the nearby Stabæk IF, named Stabæk FK (FK = Fotball Kvinner (Football Women)). Asker finished among the top three 18 out of the 25 seasons the club existed. The new Stabæk team began playing in the Toppserien from the 2009 season and won the league in 2010 and 2013. Røa won Toppserien five times from 2004 to 2011. Lillestrøm SK Kvinner won six consecutive titles from 2014 to 2019.