Danish Women's League Explained

Danmarksturneringens Kvindeliga
Country:Denmark
Confed:UEFA
Organiser:Danish FA (DBU)
First:1975
Divisions:2 (1975–1980)
1 (1981–present)
Teams:20 (1975–1980)
12 (1981–1992)
8 (1993–present)
Relegation:Kvinde 1. division
Pyramid:Danish football league system
Levels:1
Domest Cup:DBU KvindePokalen
(1992–present)
Confed Cup:UEFA Women's Champions League
Champions:HB Køge (3rd title)
Season:2022–23
Most Champs:Brøndby IF (12 titles)
Tv:Eurosport 2, Sport Live and Dplay (2020–2021)
Viaplay/TV3 Sport
(2021–2024)
Website:kvindeliga.dk
Current:2024–25 Danish Women's League

The Danish Women's League (Danish: '''Danmarksturneringens Kvindeliga''', '''Kvinde-DM Liga''' or '''Kvindeligaen''') is a semi-professional top-flight league for women's football in Denmark. It is organised by the Danish Football Association (DBU) as part of the nation-wide Danmarksturneringen i kvindefodbold (Kvinde-DM) and is placed as the first division of the Danish football league system. Clubs in the league must meet certain criteria concerning appropriate facilities and finances. All of the league's clubs qualify for the proper rounds of the DBU KvindePokalen. The top teams of each season qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League.

The division has changed its name on several occasions. It began as Danmarksturneringen i damefodbold (1975 until 1980), then Dame 1. division (1981 until 1992), Elitedivisionen (1993 until 2015–16) and the current name, Kvindeligaen, beginning with the 2016–17 season. Due to sponsorship arrangements, it was known as 3F Ligaen for fourteen seasons (2005–06 until 2018–19) and since the 2019–20 season as Gjensidige Kvindeligaen.

According to FIFA's 2023 Women's Benchmarking Report, the league in 2021-22 drew an average of 388 fans per game, 57% of players had signed compensated player contracts (of whom, the average annual salary was between $10-15k USD), and 29% of players made their primary living from football.[1] The league's status as semi-professional presented challenges for its return-to-play from the 2019-2020 COVID-19 pandemic, as initially in Denmark only fully professional sports were allowed to resume.[2] A rise in interest and participation in women's football has driven increased investment into the league in recent years, although the best players in Denmark still often depart for fully professional clubs abroad.[3]

Format

From 1994 to 2005/06 the league consisted of 8 teams playing each other 3 times and the best team then was awarded the championship. The last team was relegated with the second last team playing a playoff, against the second team of the Kvinde 1. division.2006/07 was a transition year, because the league was extended to 10 teams. The last team after the season played a relegation match against the third placed team of the 1. division, for a place in Elitedivisionen. The top two teams of the 1. division were automatically promoted.

From 2007/08 to 2012/13 the league consisted of 10 teams. Those 10 teams played a double round robin as a regular season. After that there are 2 Playoff Groups. Place 1 to 4 of the regular season play the Championship Playoff. Place 5 to 10 play the Relegation Playoff. In the Playoffs, the points accumulated over the regular season are divided by 2 (rounding up if necessary). Those points are the starting points for the playoffs. The Championship group plays another round robin (6 matches each) with the winner being awarded the championship title. The Relegation Group plays a single round robin (5 matches each) after which, the bottom two clubs are relegated.

The 2013/14 season again was played only with eight teams. The top six after the regular season play a championship league, the seventh and the eight placed teams play in a qualification league determining whether they keep their spots or get relegated.

Clubs

National champions

See main article: List of Danish women's football champions.

2023–24 season

See also: List of Danmarksturneringen i kvindefodbold clubs.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 'Setting the Pace' FIFA Benchmarking Report (3rd Edition) . FIFA . 25 January 2024 . 2023-08-18.
  2. News: Frigaard . Anders Melchior . Kvindeligaen kan måske genoptages: Afventer svar fra regeringen . 30 May 2020 . DR / www.dr.dk . 8 May 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200530202804/https://www.dr.dk/sporten/fodbold/kvindeligaen/kvindeligaen-kan-maaske-genoptages-afventer-svar-fra-regeringen . 30 May 2020 . da.
  3. Web site: Tejwani . Karan . Analysing The Rise of Women’s Football in Denmark . Breaking The Lines . 25 January 2024 . 2022-05-10.