Country: | England |
Season: | 2019–20 |
Wdivision1: | FA Women's Super League |
Wdivision2: | FA Women's Championship |
Wchampions2: | Aston Villa |
Wdivision3: | FA Women's National League |
Wchampions3: | not awarded |
Wdomestic: | Women's FA Cup |
Wdchampions: | Manchester City |
Wleaguecup: | FA Women's League Cup |
Wlchampions: | Chelsea |
Prevseason: | 2018–19 |
Nextseason: | 2020–21 |
Flagicon: | yes |
See main article: England women's national football team.
See main article: 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.
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See main article: 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D.
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See main article: 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage.
See main article: 2020 SheBelieves Cup.
See main article: 2019–20 UEFA Women's Champions League.
See main article: 2019–20 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase.
Notes
Tier | Division(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|
1 | FA Women's Super League (1 division) | ||
2 | FA Women's Championship (1 division) | ||
3 | FA Women's National League Premier (North and South) | ||
4 | FA Women's National League Division One (North, Midlands, South East and South West) | ||
5 | Regional League Premier Divisions (North West, North East, West Midlands, East Midlands, | ||
6 | Regional League Division One (North West, North East, West Midlands, East Midlands, | County League Premier Divisions | |
7–9 | County Leagues (various divisions) |
See main article: 2019–20 FA WSL.
See main article: 2019–20 FA Women's Championship.
See main article: 2019–20 FA Women's National League.
See main article: 2019–20 Women's FA Cup.
See main article: 2020 Women's FA Cup Final. The final was played at Wembley Stadium on Saturday 1 November 2020.[1]
See main article: 2019–20 FA Women's League Cup.
See main article: 2020 FA Women's League Cup Final.
Both the FA Women's Super League and the FA Women's National League ran additional leagues alongside their main divisions for academy and reserve teams. The WSL organised the FA WSL Academy league, which is contested by academy teams from eleven of the twelve top-flight clubs. The only team not to enter an academy side in the competition is Tottenham Hotspur, whose place in the league was filled by Ipswich Town's under-21s.
The WNL have six regional divisions for reserve and development teams from clubs in the FA Women's National League and FA Women's Championship. They are Northern divisions 1 and 2, Midland divisions 1 and 2, the South East division and the South West division.
These divisions are all independent of the main women's football pyramid system and there is no promotion or relegation to other leagues.