Soviet women's football championship

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Soviet women's football championship
Founded1990
Folded1991
Country Soviet Union
ConfederationUEFA
Divisions3 tiers (with groups)
Number of teams24
Level on pyramid1–3
Domestic cup(s)Soviet Women's Cup
Last championsTekstilschik Ramenskoye (1st title)
(1991)
Most championshipsTekstilschik Ramenskoye and Nyva Baryshivka (1 titles)

The Soviet women's football championship were competitions among women's football teams in the late Soviet Union and were conducted by the Football Federation of the Soviet Union. The championship consisted of three tiers (Higher, First and Second leagues) with each having two or more groups.

Football competitions among women were conducted before, but in 1990 an official championship was established. In 1989, there took place competitions among teams of trade unions involving some 60 teams.[1] After two seasons the championship was discontinued due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Most of the Russia-based clubs formed the new Russian Women's Football Championship; clubs based in former Soviet republics based in Europe formed their own leagues, while those in Central Asia either dissolved or moved to Russia, as local federations did not allow women's football for many years, or none at all to date.

Champions[edit]

Year Tier Winner Runner Up Third No. of teams
1990 Higher Nyva Baryshivka (UkSSR) Serp I Molot Moscow (RSFSR) Tekstilschik Ramenskoye (RSFSR) 24
First Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (UkSSR) Viktoriya Kashira (RSFSR) Araz Baku (AzSSR)
Nig Aparan (ArSSR)
24
Second Bukovinka Chernovtsy (UkSSR) Chernomorochka Odessa (UkSSR) Lada Togliatti (RSFSR) 20
1991 Higher Tekstilschik Ramenskoye (RSFSR) Nadezhda Mahilyow (BSSR) SKIF Malakhovka (RSFSR) 24
First Energiya Voronezh (RSFSR) Spartak-13 Moscow (RSFSR) CSKA-Transexpo Moscow (RSFSR) 32
Second Rus Moscow (RSFSR) Syuyumbike Zelenodolsk (RSFSR) Kaluzhanka Kaluga (RSFSR) 18

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Женский футбол в РФ. Справка". 21 August 2010.

External links[edit]