List of Danish women's football champions explained

The Danish women's football champions (Danish: Danmarksmester i kvindefodbold, plural: Danske mestre i kvindefodbold) are the annual winners of the highest national league that is part of the Danmarksturneringen i kvindefodbold (Kvinde-DM), the nationwide women's association football league tournament in Denmark. Since February 1972, women's football in Denmark has been governed by the Danish Football Association (DBU) and sanctioned by UEFA, with the national title contested through various competition formats. The inaugural official national women's football tournament took place in the 1973 season, featuring regional league winners advancing to a knockout stage, where the play-off winners were crowned champions. A nation league system was introduced in 1975 with west and east divisions, with the top team from each group progressing for a grand final. A single nationwide first division was established in 1981, awarding the championship to the team finishing atop the league standings by the end of the season. Since the 2016–17 season, champions have been determined in the rebranded Kvindeligaen.

Brøndby IF Women hold the record for the most titles, having secured twelve championships. Hjortshøj-Egaa IF enjoyed the longest winning streak, clinching six consecutive league championships from 1986 to 1992. Brøndby IF matched this achievement by winning every season from 2002–03 to 2007–08. The Danish version of the double was achieved by Brøndby IF a record eight times, winning both the league and the cup in the same year — an accomplishment four more times than Fortuna Hjørring's four. The defending champions are FC Nordsjælland, winning the 2023–24 league title for the first time in the club's history. Lis Westberg Pedersen made history as the first female head coach in 1980, guiding BK Femina to the 8th edition of the championship in her first season. Henriette Jensen of Hjortshøj-Egaa IF became the first woman to win a championship as both a footballer and head coach in 1990. With four national championship each, Peer Lisdorf (3x Brøndby IF, 1x HB Køge) and Peer Danefeld (2x B 1909, 1x Odense BK, 1x Brøndby IF) have won the most titles as head coach.

The weekly magazine Femina, regional organisations, various clubs, and the Dansk Kvinde Fodbold Union (DKFU) held national indoor and outdoor football tournaments for women's teams throughout the 1960s, with the last competitions continuing until early 1972. Neither the Danish FA (DBU) nor the National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark (DIF) recognise any women's national championship tournaments held before February 1972. Therefore, these indoor and outdoor senior women's records are not listed here.

History

Inaugural championship playoffs

The weekly magazine Femina organised Denmark's first outdoor association football tournament for women's teams in the spring of 1960. This tournament featured thirty teams from across the country, playing under a modified set of laws created and revised by the magazine. Due to the larger number of expected participants, the original format of an initial group stage followed by a knockout phase was changed to a knockout competition with an initial qualifying phase of three rounds and a championship play-off consisting of four teams, which was played on 17 July 1960 at Valby Idrætspark. BK Femina won the final against a team from Køge by a score of 4–1. Additional indoor and outdoor football tournaments were held in the followings years, but women's football experienced decreasing interest in the mid-1960s. However, there was a small and slow growth of new teams, primarily affiliated with firms, in the late 1960s, but not warranting for a league to be formed — until 1970, the number of clubs with women's football teams did not exceed ten. BK Femina were the leading Danish women's team of the era, winning more or less every indoor and outdoor championship organised by the Dansk Kvinde Fodbold Union (DKFU). In the spring of 1971, the DKFU organised one last national outdoor football tournament with over 200 teams, where Skovlunde IF faced Billum IF in the championship final, securing a 3–0 victory.

Encouraged by both FIFA and UEFA, a successful vote at the meeting of the Board of Representatives of the Danish Football Association (DBU) on 27 February 1972 meant that women's football would now officially be acknowledged and competitions coordinated under the auspices of the national association. The first year was considered an adaptation year in which the regional football associations were to set up various committees to plan the tournaments. The qualifying regional tournaments could not meet the deadline of 1 November for having the regional champions ready for the national playoffs, and the national championship was not concluded in 1972.

The first official Danish women's national football championship was held the following year as a single-elimination tournament, where the winners of the six regional football associations' top-flight leagues, namely Nexø BK (Bornholm FA champions), BK Rødovre (Copenhagen FA champions), BK Stjernen Svendborg (Funen FA champions), Ribe BK&GF (Jutland FA champions), B 1921 (Lolland-Falster FA champions) and Skovlunde IF (Zealand FA champions), faced each other for a spot in the inaugural one-legged championship final. Ribe BK&GF became the inaugural winners of the 1973 season by winning 1–0 against BK Stjernen Svendborg in the final held at Høje Bøge Stadium, Svendborg. Besides the championship trophy from the Danish FA, additional championship plaques from the National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark (DIF) were handed to each participant. This initial format lasted for another season (1974), with a repeat of the same finalists and winners. Regional qualifiers were implemented to decide, which twenty teams would take part in the new installation of the 1975 championship.

Formation of the Danmarksturneringen

See main article: Danish Women's League. A nation league system with the Danmarksturneringen i damefodbold at the top was incepted in 1975, consisting of a nationwide first division evenly divided geographically into two groups, clubs situated east and west of the Great Belt, establishing a promotion and relegation system with the regional top-flight leagues. The two winners of each group at the end of the regular season qualified for a spot in the two-legged championship final. The winners of the third edition were BK Femina, the then oldest existing pure women's association football club, who entered the final match by finishing at the top of the east group. BK Femina defeated Ribe BK&GF 1–0 away at Ribe Stadium and 4–0 at home at Gladsaxe Idrætspark. For six seasons (1973–1980), BK Femina regularly reached the final, securing the national title on three occasions, while Ribe BK&GF won the championship three times. For economic reasons, the Danish FA wanted to postpone the implementation of a single nationwide top-flight league, as the travelling expenses would double. After winning their fifth championship in 1979, the tournament rules declared that Ribe BK&GF could keep the original trophy permanently. In a profession dominated by male coaches, Lis Westberg Pedersen became the female head coach to manage a top-flight league team, guiding BK Femina to a championship title in the 1980 season.

In 1981, the first single national women's tier-one league, named Dame 1. division, began to play using a double round-robin system with no playoffs, where the top team at the end of the season was crowned the annual national champions of Danish women's football. B 1909 won the ninth edition as the first team based at Funen, finishing five points ahead of BK Femina. Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, the women's football championship was dominated by Hjortshøj-Egaa IF and B 1909, who shared the national titles from 1981 to 1993, with Hjortshøj-Egaa IF securing six consecutive championships between 1986 and 1991. The format changed to a two-stage season in 1990, predating the two-stage format introduced to the Danish Superliga in the 1991–92 season. Teams played a single round-robin tournament in the first stage, after which points were awarded based on positions and goal scores were reset to zero. The top six and bottom six teams then playing another single round-robin for a total of 21 games to determine the champions and relegated clubs respectively. Henriette Jensen became the first woman to win the championship title as both a football player (defender) and a head coach, having already won five league titles (1982, 1984, 1986, 1987, and 1988) and one title as an assistant coach (1989) with the top-flight club Hjortshøj-Egaa IF, when she in January 1990 transitioned to a coaching position alongside Ove Sass Hansen,, securing the league title in her first and second year.

In 1993, a nationwide second division was formed, with the existing top-flight league rebranded as Elitedivisionen. The number of teams was reduced from twelve to eight, and the two-stage format underwent its first of several revisions. Fortuna Hjørring claimed the first double by winning the 1994–95 cup and 1995 league. The 1996 season lasted just six months as the tournament schedule was changed from spring-autumn to autumn-spring. Initially formed as an amateur tournament, professionalism was legalised and restricted to the Danmarksturneringen in July 1997, with the first semi-professional player contracts in Danish women's football being signed by Fortuna Hjørring and Frederiksberg BK. The first season (1997–98) as a semi-professional top-flight league was won by Hjortshøj-Egaa IF, whose roster consisted solely of players with amateur status. Fortuna Hjørring secured the 1998–99 title as the first semi-professional club. Odense BK won two seasons around the turn of the millennium in close competition with Hjortshøj-Egaa IF and Fortuna Hjørring, who finished in the top three for ten seasons.

Between 2001 and 2020, Danish women's football witnessed an uninterrupted power struggle between Fortuna Hjørring and Brøndby IF, with Brøndby IF clinching twelve league titles and finishing runners-up seven times, and the reserve for Fortuna Hjørring. Brøndby IF's dominance included six consecutive championships from 2002 to 2008. HB Køge broke the nineteen-year duopoly in the 2020–21 season by securing the championship in the final round of play, marking their first season at the highest level just three and a half years after continuous promotion from the fifth level. Prior to the 2016–17 season, the top-flight league formally changed its name to Kvindeligaen. The current challenge trophy, the ninth design in the history for the women's championship, was introduced in the 2023–24 season, replacing the previous trophy which became the permanent possession of HB Køge following their three consecutive championships (2020–2023).

Champions

Danmarksmesterskabet i damefodbold playoffs (1972–1974)

width=70pxSeason!width=110pxFinal Date!width=160pxChampions !Resultwidth=160pxRunners–up!width=220pxVenue!width=190pxWinning head coach(es)!Ref
1972National playoffs not concluded
197311 November 19731–0BK Stjernen SvendborgHøje Bøge Stadium, Svendborg Mogens Winther
197416 November 19741–0BK Stjernen SvendborgRibe Stadium, Ribe Mogens Winther

Danmarksturneringen i damefodbold playoffs (1975–1980)

width=70pxSeason!width=110pxFinal Date!width=160pxChampions !Resultwidth=160pxRunners–up!width=220pxVenue!width=190pxWinning head coach(es)!Ref(s)
19752 November 1975align=left rowspan=24–0align=left rowspan=2Ribe BK&GFRibe Stadium, Ribealign=left rowspan=2 Erik Hansen
9 November 19751–0Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxe
197631 October 1976align=left rowspan=23–0align=left rowspan=2BK FeminaRibe Stadium, Ribealign=left rowspan=2 Jørgen Berg Nielsen
7 November 19760–0Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxe
197730 October 1977align=left rowspan=21–0align=left rowspan=2Kolding BKMosevej Sportsplads, Koldingalign=left rowspan=2 Erik Hansen
6 November 19771–0Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxe
197829 October 1978align=left rowspan=23–0align=left rowspan=2BK FeminaRibe Stadium, Ribealign=left rowspan=2 Ronald Hansen
5 November 19780–2Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxe
197928 October 1979align=left rowspan=22–0align=left rowspan=2BK FeminaRibe Stadium, Ribealign=left rowspan=2 Ronald Hansen
4 November 19790–1Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxe
198026 October 1980align=left rowspan=23–2align=left rowspan=2B 1909Gladsaxe Idrætspark, Gladsaxealign=left rowspan=2 Lis Westberg Pedersen
2 November 19802–1B 1909's field at Vollsmose, Odense

Dame 1. division (1981–1992)

width=70pxSeason!width=160pxChampions !width=160pxRunners-up!width=160pxThird place!width=190pxWinning head coach(es)!Ref(s)
1981BK FeminaBK Rødovre Henning Schmidt
1982B 1909BK Rødovre Ernst Beck
1983Hjortshøj-Egaa IFBK Rødovre Henning Schmidt
1984B 1909Fortuna Hjørring Ernst Beck
1985Fortuna HjørringHjortshøj-Egaa IF Mogens Rasmussen
1986B 1909Fortuna Hjørring Poul Højmose
1987Fortuna HjørringB 1909 Poul Højmose
1988Fortuna HjørringB 1909 Poul Højmose
1989Fortuna HjørringVarde IF Ragner Nielsen
1990B 1909Fortuna Hjørring Henriette Jensen
Ove Sass Hansen
1991BK RødovreB 1909 Ove Sass Hansen
Henriette Jensen

1992Hjortshøj-Egaa IFFortuna Hjørring Peer Danefeld

Elitedivisionen (1993–2016)

width=70pxSeason!width=160pxChampions !width=160pxRunners-up!width=160pxThird place!width=190pxWinning head coach(es)!Ref(s)
1993Fortuna HjørringHjortshøj-Egaa IF Peer Danefeld
1994Hjortshøj-Egaa IFBK Rødovre Ove Christensen
1995Hjortshøj-Egaa IFOdense BK Ove Christensen
Steen B. Andersen

1996Hjortshøj-Egaa IFBK Rødovre Steen B. Andersen
1996–97Fortuna HjørringOdense BK Jan Knudsen
Henriette K. Jensen
Troels Bech
1997–98Fortuna HjørringOdense BK Troels Bech
Hugo Eskesen
1998–99Hjortshøj-Egaa IFOdense BK Jacob Nørgaard
1999–2000Fortuna HjørringHjortshøj-Egaa IF Erling Thomsen
Jan Knudsen

2000–01Fortuna HjørringHjortshøj-Egaa IF Peer Danefeld
2001–02Brøndby IFIK Skovbakken Jens Overgaard
Steen Refsgaard
2002–03Fortuna HjørringOdense BK Peder Siggaard
2003–04Fortuna HjørringIK Skovbakken Peder Siggaard
Peer Danefeld

2004–05Fortuna HjørringIK Skovbakken Peer Danefeld
Kenneth Heiner-Møller

2005–06Fortuna HjørringSkovlunde IF Kenneth Heiner-Møller
Henrik Jensen

2006–07Fortuna HjørringSkovlunde IF Henrik Jensen
2007–08Fortuna HjørringSkovlunde IF Henrik Jensen
2008–09Brøndby IFIK Skovbakken Flemming Nielsen
2009–10Brøndby IFIK Skovbakken Flemming Nielsen
2010–11Fortuna HjørringIK Skovbakken Peer Lisdorf
2011–12Fortuna HjørringIK Skovbakken Peer Lisdorf
2012–13Fortuna HjørringOdense BK Peer Lisdorf
2013–14Brøndby IFOdense BK Brian Sørensen
2014–15Fortuna HjørringKoldingQ Peer Lisdorf
Per Nielsen

2015–16Brøndby IFKoldingQ Brian Sørensen

Kvindeligaen (2016–present)

width=70pxSeason!width=160pxChampions !width=160pxRunners-up!width=160pxThird place!width=190pxWinning head coach(es)!Ref(s)
2016–17Fortuna HjørringIK Skovbakken Per Nielsen
2017–18Brøndby IFKoldingQ Brian Sørensen
Carrie Kveton
2018–19Fortuna HjørringVSK Aarhus Per Nielsen
2019–20Brøndby IFFC Nordsjælland Carrie Kveton
Niclas Hougaard
2020–21Brøndby IFFortuna Hjørring Peer Lisdorf
2021–22Fortuna HjørringBrøndby IF Søren Randa-Boldt
2022–23Brøndby IFFortuna Hjørring Søren Randa-Boldt
2023–24Brøndby IFHB Køge Chris Sargeant
2024–25Season in progress

Performances

Nine clubs have claimed the Danish national title. Among these, half of the championships have been won by Jutlandic clubs, with more than one-third by teams from Zealand, and one-seventh by Funen-based squads. No teams from the regional football associations of DBU Copenhagen, DBU Lolland-Falster, and DBU Bornholm have finished in the top spot. Copenhagen-based BK Rødovre were runners-up in 1991, achieved third place on five occasions, and qualified for the championship playoffs in the two first editions. Funen-based B 1921 finished 8th in the 2002–03 season, while Bornholm-based Svaneke BK ended the 1980 season in 7th place (east group).

Since the 2002–03 season, the Danish FA has officially permitted clubs to display a symbolic five-pointed gold star, designed by the national association, above the club's logo on their jerseys for every fifth championship won. Fortuna Hjørring added a star above the previous wordmark logo shortly thereafter. When Fortuna Hjørring introduced a new logo design in March/April 2008, a yellow star became an integral part of the new design. Upon winning their 10th title in 2018, a second star was incorporated into the logo. Brøndby IF Women utilised this option for the first time during the 2011–12 season by featuring a single yellow star on their jersey designs, with a second star added in 2015. The reigning champions also wear a black-and-white version of the Danish FA logo with the text "Danmarksmester" on the right sleeve or on the chest, alongside the year of their championship at the bottom, throughout the following season.

Performance by club

RankClubChampionsWinning seasons
1Brøndby IF12102002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2014–15, 2016–17, 2018–19
2Fortuna Hjørring11221994, 1995, 1996, 1998–99, 2001–02, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2017–18, 2019–20
3IK Skovbakken1061982, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1996–97, 1997–98
4B 1909551981, 1983, 1985, 1992, 1993
5Ribe BK511973, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1979
6BK Femina341975, 1977, 1980
7HB Køge302020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23
8Odense BK Q201999–2000, 2000–01
9FC Nordsjælland102023–24
- BK Stjernen Svendborg02
- Kolding IF01
- BK Rødovre01

Performance by regional association

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "List of Danish women's football champions".

Except where otherwise indicated, Everything.Explained.Today is © Copyright 2009-2024, A B Cryer, All Rights Reserved. Cookie policy.

RankRegionTitlesClub(s)
1DBU Jutland26
2DBU Zealand19
3DBU Funen7
- DBU Copenhagen0
- DBU Lolland-Falster0
- DBU Bornholm0