Faroe Islands women's national football team explained

Type:Women
Faroe Islands
Badge:Faroe Islands Football Association logo.svg
Badge Size:150px
Fifa Trigramme:FRO
Nickname:Kvinnulandsliðið
(Women's National Team)
Association:Faroe Islands
Football Association
(FSF)
Confederation:UEFA (Europe)
Coach:Signe Pries Andersen
Most Caps:Heidi Sevdal (82)
Captain:Ásla Johannesen
Top Scorer:Rannvá B. Andreasen (27)
Home Stadium:Tórsvøllur
Fifa Max:60
Fifa Max Date:June 2009
Fifa Min:113
Fifa Min Date:June 2024
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Largest Win: 8–0
(Ħamrun, Malta; 6 April 2015)
Largest Loss: 0–13
(Tórshavn, Faroe Islands; 8 October 2019)

The Faroe Islands women's national football team represents the Faroe Islands in women's association football and is controlled by the Faroe Islands Football Association (FSF), the governing body of all football in the Faroe Islands. The FSF became a member of the International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) in 1988 and Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) in 1990. By population, it remains the fourth smallest member of UEFA, which encompasses the countries of Europe. The women's team played their first FIFA-sanctioned international match in 1995 and have never advanced to the finals of the FIFA Women's World Cup or UEFA Women's Championship. They took part in the Island Games in 2001, 2003 and 2005 and won all three tournaments, as well as appearing at the 2010 edition of the Algarve Cup. In the Faroe Islands, the team is known as the Kvinnulandsliðið.

History

The FSF was founded on 13 January 1979[1] and a women's national league began play in 1985.[2] The first Faroese women's national team games took place in June 1986, with two defeats to Iceland. The matches, a 6–0 defeat at Kópavogsvöllur and a 2–0 defeat at Akranesvöllur, predate the Faroe Islands' membership of FIFA and UEFA but are listed as full internationals at both FIFA.com and the official website of the Football Association of Iceland (KSÍ).[3] [4]

The Faroe Islands joined FIFA on 2 July 1988[1] and the male national team played its first official match—a 1–0 defeat against Iceland—on 24 August 1988.[5] Membership of UEFA followed on 18 April 1990 and the Faroe Islands' male team entered its first major international competition later that year: the qualifying rounds for the 1992 UEFA European Football Championship.[1]

A women's team was formed to take part in the 1997 UEFA Women's Championship qualification tournament, which began in September 1995. Páll Guðlaugsson was appointed as coach. The Faroe Islands were competing at class B, in a regionalised group alongside Belgium, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The group winners would not qualify for the final tournament but would play-off against a last placed team from A class for promotion to the higher grade.[6]

The Faroe Islands staged all their home games at the national stadium of the time, Svangaskarð in Toftir. On 24 September 1995 they lost their first ever home match 2–0 to Ireland.[7] The following month, another 2–0 defeat, to Belgium in Brussels, preceded a 7–1 loss in Scotland where Sólvá Joensen scored the team's first ever goal.[8] Two days later, on 25 October 1995, the Faroe Islands beat Wales 1–0 at Farrar Road in Bangor to record their first ever victory. Helga Ellingsgaard scored the decisive goal on 35 minutes,[9] while opposition coach Sue Lopez lamented her team's failure to convert any of their 20 shots at goal.

The next match was a 3–1 defeat in Dublin, Ireland's third goal coming in the last minute. In 1996 the Faroe Islands finished their campaign with three home games, but lost them all. The first, on 18 May 1996, was a 9–0 defeat by group winners Belgium which remained the Faroe Islands' joint record defeat until 2019. Scotland and Wales departed Toftir with 3–0 and 1–0 victories, respectively, as the Faroe Islands finished bottom of the group with three points, having scored three goals and conceded 27.

The FSF scrapped their women's national team after the tournament, as they were unwilling to fund travel to away fixtures. They did enter competitions at youth level, which were not played on a home and away basis but were mini-tournaments staged in a single location to keep costs down.[10]

When the senior women's national team was relaunched in 2004 after an eight-year hiatus, their first match was a 2–1 friendly defeat to Ireland. Irish coach Noel King named an experimental team which lacked his leading players from Arsenal Ladies.[11] The game was staged in Klaksvík on 12 October 2004, the day before the nations' senior men's teams met at Lansdowne Road, Dublin.

In the next match, a return friendly with Ireland at the Oscar Traynor Centre in Dublin, Rannvá B. Andreasen put the Faroe Islands ahead after six minutes. Ireland hit back to win 2–1.

The Faroe Islands' first matches back in UEFA competition came in November 2006, at the UEFA Women's Euro 2009 qualifying series. At a preliminary round mini-tournament held in Strumica, Macedonia, Malena Josephsen's injury time goal in the first match was not enough to avert a 2–1 defeat to Wales. The team was eliminated after another defeat, 1–0 to Kazakhstan. In the final match the Faroe Islands beat hosts Macedonia 7–0 at Stadion Kukuš to record a record win which stood until 2015.

Team image

Home stadium

The Faroe Islands women's national football team plays their home matches on the Tórsvøllur.

Results and fixtures

Legend

2024

Coaching staff

Manager history

Players

Current squad

Recent call ups

Former players

Records

Individual records

Source:[20]

Most capped players

RankPlayerCaps
1align=Heidi Sevdal82
2align= Olga Kristina Hansen68
3align=Rannvá Andreasen55
4align=Eyðvør Klakstein47
4align=Ásla Johannesen47
6align="Ansy" Sevdal45
7align= 40
8align=Randi Wardum38
9align=Lív Arge31
9align=Fríðrún Olsen31

Top goalscorers

RankPlayerGoals
1align=Heidi Sevdal26
2align=Rannvá B. Andreasen25
3align=Malena Josephsen10
4align=Olga Kristina Hansen5
4align=Milja Simonsen5
6align=Eyðvør Klakstein4
7align=Mona Breckmann3
7align=Ásla Johannesen3
7align=Jensa Tórolvsdóttir3

Team records

On 28 November 2012 two of the players of the Faroe Islands women's national team set a world record. For the first time ever a parent and child played together in a football match for their country.[21] Bára Skaale Klakkstein has played for many years now on the national team, Eyðvør has played for the U17 and U19 national teams, but on 28 November 2012 both mother and daughter played together in a friendly match against Luxembourg. The Faroe Islands won 6–0. Eyðvør was born on 5 September 1995 and was 17 years old when playing this match which was her first for the national team. The mother, Bára Skaale Klakkstein, was born on 24 March 1973[22] and was 39 years old, when she played the match against Luxembourg. Mother and daughter have played together on the KÍ women's best team since 2010.[23]

Honours

Island Games

Women's Baltic Cup

Competitive record

FIFA Women's World Cup

FIFA Women's World Cup recordQualification record
YearResultGPWD*LGFGAGDGPWD*LGFGAGD
1991 to 2011Did not enterDid not participate
2015Did not qualify13238945−36
2019113081056−46
20238008256−54
2027To be determinedTo be determined
Total32532421157−136

UEFA Women's Championship

UEFA Women's Championship recordQualifying record
YearResultGPWD*LGSGAGDGPWD*LGSGAGD
Did not enterDid not participate
1997Did not qualify8107327−24
2001Did not enterDid not enter
2005
2009Did not qualify310283+5
20133102220
20173201124+8
20227007142−41
2025To be determinedTo be determined
Total2450192678−52

UEFA Women's Nations League

UEFA Women's Nations League record
SeasonDivisionGroupwidth=28width=28width=28width=28width=28width=28width=28width=35width=28
2023–24C14th600611550th
2025–26CTo be determined
Total18th

Island Games

Island Games record
YearResultGPWDLGSGA
2001Champions4400394
2003Champions4400342
2005Champions5500332
2007 to presentDid not enter
TOTAL3 Titles1313001068

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Faroese future in safe hands. UEFA. 17 November 2013. 21 February 2010.
  2. Web site: Faroe Islands – List of Women Champions. 17 November 2013. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 11 July 2013. Karel. Stokkermans.
  3. Web site: Fixtures and Results – From 01.01.1986 To 31.12.1986. https://web.archive.org/web/20110904143655/http://www.fifa.com/associations/association=fro/fixturesresults/gender=f/index.html. dead. 4 September 2011. 17 November 2013. FIFA.
  4. Web site: Leikskýrsla. 17 November 2013. Football Association of Iceland. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304113538/http://www.ksi.is/mot/motalisti/leikskyrsla/opinskyrsla.asp?Leikur=120345. dead.
  5. Web site: Courtney. Barrie. Faroe Islands – List of International matches. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 17 November 2013. 16 May 2008.
  6. Web site: Timmermann . Bernd . European Women Championship 1995–97 . . 17 November 2013 . 28 January 2004 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120406093448/http://www.rsssf.com/tablese/eur-women97.html . 6 April 2012 .
  7. Web site: Føroyar – Írland 0 – 2 (0–1). KÍ – Kvinnur – Online. 17 November 2013. Malena. Josephsen. Malena Josephsen. 10 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150610201757/http://heima.olivant.fo/~malena/fsf/belgia.htm. dead.
  8. Web site: Skotland – Føroyar 7 – 1 (3–1). KÍ – Kvinnur – Online. 17 November 2013. Malena. Josephsen. Malena Josephsen. 10 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150610211930/http://heima.olivant.fo/~malena/fsf/skotland.htm. dead.
  9. Web site: Wales – Føroyar. KÍ – Kvinnur – Online. 17 November 2013. Malena. Josephsen. Malena Josephsen. 10 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150610211930/http://heima.olivant.fo/~malena/fsf/skotland.htm. dead.
  10. Web site: Interview: Malena Josephsen (KI Klaksvik). 16 November 2013. Soccerway. 24 September 2005. 3 December 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131203010428/https://uk.women.soccerway.com/news/2005/September/24/interview-malena-josephsen-ki-klaksvik/n85205/. dead.
  11. Web site: International matches (Women) 2004. 12 November 2013. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 5 April 2005. Sébastien. Duret.
  12. Web site: Álvur gevst sum landsliðsvenjari . 23 May 2012 . fsf.fo . Faroese Football Association . 25 January 2021.
  13. Web site: Kvinnulandsliðið nýggjar venjarar . 5 September 2012 . fsf.fo . Faroese Football Association . 25 January 2021.
  14. Web site: Kvinnulandsliðið nýggja avbjóðing . 21 December 2015 . fsf.fo . Faroese Football Association . 25 January 2021.
  15. News: John Petersen nýggjur landsliðsvenjari . Jákup. Ósá. Icelandic . . 17 January 2019.
  16. News: Lene nýggjur A-landsliðsvenjari . Icelandic . . 26 January 2021.
  17. https://globalsportsarchive.com/people/soccer/signe-andersen/7878259/ New coach for
  18. https://www.fsf.fo/oddalidid-kemur-a-vitjan/ Oddaliðið kemur á vitjan
  19. Web site: Greece vs. Faroe Islands - 5 April 2024 - Soccerway .
  20. Web site: Landsliðsleikarar 1995–2013. Faroe Islands Football Association. 16 November 2013. fo. 4 September 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180904084728/http://www.fsf.fo/Default.aspx?ID=704. dead.
  21. Web site: Sportal.fo, Eyðvør og Bára skrivaðu søgu . 29 November 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130222043946/http://sportal.fo/grein/eydvor_og_bara_skrivau_sgu . 22 February 2013 . dead .
  22. http://www.faroesoccer.com/player.php?PlayerName=B&gender=1&_=&playerID=1447 Bára Skaale Klakkstein on Faroesoccer.com
  23. http://www.faroesoccer.com/match.php?matchID=13319&pid= Faroesoccer.com (chose "Útilið", statistics from one of the 2010 matches where mother and daughter played together).