Misplaced Pages

1989 European Competition for Women's Football

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "1989 European Competition for Women's Football" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
1989 European Competition for Women's Football
Fußball-Europameisterschaft der Frauen 1989
Tournament details
Host countryWest Germany
Dates28 June – 2 July
Teams4
Venue(s)3 (in 3 host cities)
Final positions
Champions West Germany (1st title)
Runners-up Norway
Third place Sweden
Tournament statistics
Matches played4
Goals scored13 (3.25 per match)
Attendance35,500 (8,875 per match)
Top scorer(s)Norway Sissel Grude
West Germany Ursula Lohn
(2 goals each)
Best player(s)West Germany Doris Fitschen
1987 1991
International football competition

The 1989 European Competition for Women's Football took place in West Germany. It was won by the hosts in a final against defending champions Norway. Again, the competition began with four qualifying groups, but this time the top two countries qualified for a home-and-away quarter final, before the four winners entered the semi-finals in the host nation.

Qualification

Main article: 1989 European Competition for Women's Football qualifying

Squads

For a list of all squads that played in the final tournament, see 1989 European Competition for Women's Football squads

Bracket

 Semi-finalsFinal
       
 28 June – Siegen
 
  West Germany (p)1 (4)
 2 July – Osnabrück
  Italy1 (3)
  West Germany4
 28 June – Lüdenscheid
  Norway1
  Sweden1
 
  Norway2
 Third place play-off
 
 30 June – Osnabrück
 
  Italy1
 
  Sweden (a.e.t.)2

Semifinals

West Germany 1–1 (a.e.t.) Italy
Neid 57' Report
DFB Report (in German)
FIGC Report (in Italian)
Report
Vignotto 72'
Penalties
Kuhlmann soccer ball with check mark
Bindl soccer ball with check mark
Fitschen soccer ball with check mark
Fehrmann soccer ball with red X
Landers soccer ball with red X
Voss soccer ball with red X
Isbert soccer ball with check mark
4–3 soccer ball with check mark Ferraguzzi
soccer ball with red X Carta
soccer ball with check mark Morace
soccer ball with red X Vignotto
soccer ball with check mark D'Astolfo
soccer ball with red X Iozzelli
soccer ball with red X Marsiletti
Leimbachstadion, SiegenAttendance: 8,000Referee: Brian Hill (England)
Sweden 1–2 Norway
Videkull 54' Report
NFF Report (in Norwegian)
SvFF Report (in Swedish)
Report
Medalen 1'
Grude 52'
Nattenberg Stadion, LüdenscheidAttendance: 3,000Referee: Cornelius Bakker (Netherlands)

Third place playoff

Sweden 2–1 (a.e.t.) Italy
Sundhage 43'
H. Johansson 94'
Report
FIGC Report (in Italian)
SvFF Report (in Swedish)
Report
Ferraguzzi 28'
Stadion an der Bremer Brücke, OsnabrückAttendance: 2,500Referee: Ivan Gregr (Czechoslovakia)

Final

Main article: 1989 European Competition for Women's Football final
West Germany 4–1 Norway
Lohn 22', 36'
Mohr 45'
Fehrmann 73'
Report
DFB Report (in German)
NFF Report (in Norwegian)
Report
Grude 54'
Stadion an der Bremer Brücke, OsnabrückAttendance: 22,000Referee: Carlos Silva Valente (Portugal)

Goalscorers

2 goals
1 goal

References

  1. "1989: Germany arrive in style –". Uefa.com. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  2. "How Women's Euros have evolved". 1 June 2005 – via news.bbc.co.uk.

External links

UEFA Women's Championship
Union of European Football Associations (UEFA)
Tournaments
Qualification
Finals
Squads
Bids
Predecessor tournaments
Categories: