Première Ligue Explained

Upright:0.6
Organiser:LFFP
Country:France
Confed:UEFA
Teams:12
Levels:1
Relegation:Seconde Ligue
Confed Cup:UEFA Women's Champions League
Champions:Olympique Lyonnais (17th)
Most Champs:Olympique Lyonnais (17)
Current:2024–25 season

The Première Ligue (; sponsor name Arkema Première Ligue) is a professional women's association football league at the highest level of the French football league system, and is run by the Ligue féminine de football professionnel (LFFP). Its annual competition features twelve teams playing two series of round-robin matches from September to June, to determine the four participants of a single-elimination tournament. The winners of the tournament are crowned champions of France, and contest the Trophée des Championnes match the following season. At the end of each season, the top three teams qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League, while the bottom two teams are relegated to the Seconde Ligue.

The Première Ligue is the latest iteration of a competition founded in 1975 by the French Football Federation (FFF) as the amateur Division 1 Féminine. Professionalism was introduced for the first time in the 2009–10 season. The competition was ranked the best women's league in Europe according to UEFA 2019–20 women's association club coefficients.[1] Olympique Lyonnais have won the league the most times (17), and also hold the record for consecutive wins (14).

History

The first women's association football league in France was founded in 1918 by the Fédération des Sociétés Féminines Sportives de France (FSFSF), a women's football organization in France that was led by women's football pioneer Alice Milliat. The league lasted for twelve seasons before disbanding due to the prohibition of women's football. In 1975, women's football was officially re-instated and a new league, the Division 1 Féminine, was established by the governing body of football in France, the French Football Federation. Professionalism was introduced in 2009–10 season and female football players in France began signing professional contracts with their clubs at the same season, the most notable of which is Olympique Lyonnais.[2] [3]

In July 2022, it was announced that the Division 1 Féminine will feature in the FIFA 23 video game.[4]

From 2024–25 season, D1 Feminine change name to Première Ligue.

Competition format

There are 12 clubs in the Première Ligue. During the course of a season, usually from September to June, each club plays the others twice, once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 22 games, though clubs are allowed to host "big" matches at the home venues of their male counterparts, such as when Paris Saint-Germain hosted Juvisy at the Parc des Princes during the 2009–10 season. The female leagues, until the 2016–17 season, were run similarly to the men's amateur leagues in France with teams receiving four points for a win and two points for a draw. one point was awarded for a loss however, the league now adopts the 3-1-0 system. the Teams are ranked by total points, then goal difference, and then goals scored. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned champion. If points are equal, the goal difference and then goals scored determine the winner. If still equal, teams are deemed to occupy the same position. If there is a tie for the championship, for relegation, or for qualification to other competitions, a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank. The two lowest placed teams are relegated to the Division 2 Féminine and the winners of the two groups in D2 Féminine are promoted in their place.

From 1974 to 1992, the league consisted of several groups with the winners of each group entering a play-off phase to determine the champion. Between the years 2001–2004, a play-off system was re-adopted. The top four clubs in the league table were inserted into a play-off bracket following the completion of the season with the winner being crowned champions.The play-offs among the four best teams were reintroduced beginning with the 2023–24 season.[5]

European qualification

Until the 2019–2020 edition, only the top two teams in the Division 1 Féminine qualify for the round of 32 of the UEFA Women's Champions League.

Since the 2020–2021 edition, as determined by the UEFA women's coefficient, the winner of the Division 1 directly qualifies for the group stage of the UEFA Women's Champions League, whereas the second team qualifies for the second round and the third team qualifies for the first round. As of today, the winner of the Coupe de France féminine, the female equivalent of the Coupe de France, does not qualify for European competition.

Starting with the 2021–22 edition, as determined by the UEFA women's coefficient, the top three teams will qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League.

Clubs

2024–25 Première Ligue teams! scope="col"
TeamLocationVenue
AS Saint-Étienne7th Stade Etivallière
Dijon FCO8th Stade Gaston Gérard
En Avant Guingamp10th Stade de l'Akademi EA Guingamp
FC Fleury 915th Stade Robert Bobin
FC Nantes2nd (D2) Stade Marcel-Saupin
Le Havre AC9th Stade Océane
Montpellier HSC6th Centre d'entrainement Bernard Gasset
Olympique Lyonnais1st
Paris FC3rd Stade Sébastien Charléty
Paris Saint-Germain2nd Stade Georges Lefèvre
RC Strasbourg Alsace1st (D2) Stade Jean Nicolas Muller
Stade de Reims4th Stade Louis Blériot

Previous winners

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

Top scorers

Included in the table below is a list of the top scorers of each season, starting from the 2001–02 season. Information for previous seasons unavailable.

SeasonGoals scoredPlayer
Marinette Pichon (Saint-Memmie Olympique)
Sandrine Brétigny (Lyon)
Claire Morel (Lyon)
Marinette Pichon (Juvisy)
Marinette Pichon (Juvisy)
Sandrine Brétigny (Lyon)
Laëtitia Tonazzi (Juvisy)
Kátia (Lyon)
Eugénie Le Sommer (Saint-Brieuc)
Laëtitia Tonazzi (Juvisy)
Eugénie Le Sommer (Lyon)
Lotta Schelin (Lyon)
Gaëtane Thiney (Juvisy)
Lotta Schelin (Lyon)
Ada Hegerberg (Lyon)
Ada Hegerberg (Lyon)
Eugénie Le Sommer (Lyon)
Ada Hegerberg (Lyon)
Marie-Antoinette Katoto (PSG)
Marie-Antoinette Katoto (PSG)
Khadija Shaw (Bordeaux)
Marie-Antoinette Katoto (PSG)
Kadidiatou Diani (PSG)
Tabitha Chawinga (PSG)

Awards

See main article: Trophées UNFP du football. In addition to the winner's trophy and the individual winner's medal players receive, the National Union of Professional Footballers (UNFP) awards the UNFP Female Player of the Year award to the top female player of the league. The current winner of the award is German international and Lyon midfielder Dzsenifer Marozsán. Following the 2009–10 season, the French Football Federation, who oversee the league, also began awarding a Player of the Year trophy. The jury panel who decided the winner consists of the twelve managers in the D1 Féminine.[6] The Division 1 Féminine Player of the Month award was added in 2020.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Women's association club coefficients . UEFA . 18 January 2021.
  2. News: Statut pro pour ces dames . https://web.archive.org/web/20090307101100/http://www.lequipe.fr/Football/breves2009/20090306_081943_statut-pro-pour-ces-dames.html . dead . 7 March 2009 . L'Équipe. 6 March 2009. 16 June 2010 .
  3. News: Foot féminin, la lueur d'un statut professionnel. https://web.archive.org/web/20090314000705/http://www.footamat.fr/foot-feminin-statut-professionnel_2001.html . dead . 14 March 2009 . FootAmat . 14 March 2009. 16 June 2010 .
  4. Web site: Fifa 23 to add women's club football for first time . Stuart . Keith . 20 July 2022 . The Guardian . 3 August 2022.
  5. News: Saison 2024-2025 : le calendrier . 25 July 2024 . . 17 July 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240721224333/https://www.fff.fr/article/12890-saison-2024-2025-le-calendrier.html . 21 July 2024 . fr.
  6. Web site: Challenge de la meilleure joueuse de D1 . 1 June 2010 . French Football Federation . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100530000617/http://www.fff.fr/champ/femininesD1/actualite/530580.shtml . 30 May 2010 .
  7. Web site: Diani, Player of the Month for September . French Football Federation . 18 April 2021 . 7 October 2020.