Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Adran Premier

Female association football league in Wales

Adran Premier

Summary

Female association football league in Wales

FieldValue
nameAdran Premier
logoGenero_Adran_Premier_Logo.png
pixels240px
country
other countries(1 team)
confedUEFA
founded2009
teams8
relegationAdran North
Adran South
levels1
domest_cupFAW Women's Cup
league_cupAdran Trophy
confed_cupUEFA Women's Champions League
championsCardiff City (3rd title)
most_successful_clubCardiff Met. (6 titles)
Swansea City (6 titles)
website
current2025–26

Adran South Swansea City (6 titles) The Adran Premier (, formerly the Welsh Premier Women's League), currently known for sponsorship reasons as Genero Adran Premier, is the highest level of league competition for women's football in Wales. Established in 2009, it is organised by the Football Association of Wales and features four semi-professional teams out of eight. As of 2024, the league is ranked 48th overall by the UEFA Women's association club coefficients.

History

In its first three seasons, the league was divided into two Conferences that played a double round robin, with the winner of both contesting a final for the championship. The first season featured no relegation, from the 2010–11 season onwards, the last placed team in each conference got relegated.

Since 2012–13 the league is played in one group only. In 2015–16 two teams were relegated. The eight clubs who formed the League were Aberystwyth Town Ladies, Caernarfon Town Ladies, Llanidloes Ladies, Manorbier Ladies, Newcastle Emlyn Ladies, Swansea City Ladies, UWIC Ladies and Wrexham Women.

2012 Season Launch

The league was increased to five teams per Conference in 2010–11, with Caerphilly Castle Ladies and Trefelin Ladies joining the South and Llandudno Junction Ladies joining the North. Manorbier Ladies ceased playing activities after their inaugural season.

Llandudno Junction's stay in the league lasted just one season before they were relegated; they were replaced by Northop Hall Girls.

In May 2021, the Football Association of Wales announced a restructuring of the league, including cutting the number of teams from nine to eight, splitting the second tier into northern and southern conferences, and the introduction of a U19 development league. The restructuring saw Abergavenny Women's FC, Caerphilly Castle Ladies and Briton Ferry Llansawel Ladies demoted to the second tier, while Barry Town United Ladies FC and The New Saints joined the Premier League. The choice of top-tier teams in the restructuring was met with a significant amount of criticism, as Abergavenny had finished within the top four during the 2020–21 season and The New Saints did not have a complete senior women's side. FAW head of women's football Lowri Roberts stood by their decision, adding that "we have to be able to compete with Tier 3 in England. The WSL and Championship in England are professional and semi-professional and we’re a long way off that. It’s unlikely we’ll get to a professional level."

Rebranding

In August 2021, the league also announced a rebranding initiative, changing the name from "Welsh Premier Women's League" to "Adran Premier", adopting the Welsh word adran (division). For sponsorship reasons it is named the "Genero Adran Premier" (sponsored by Welsh firm Genero). The second tier conferences were likewise renamed Adran North and Adran South. The rebranding was in part an effort to remove the word "Women's" from the league name to achieve better parity with the men's game. The league cup was likewise rebranded to the Adran Trophy.

Competition format

The club with the highest number of points at the end of the season are the League Champions. In the event of two or more clubs having the same number of points the League winners will be decided by the difference between goals scored and goals against. In the event of more than one club having the same goal difference, the club that has scored the highest number of goals will be the Champions.

Promotion and relegation

One club may be promoted to the Adran Premier, from Adran North or from Adran South, and the same number relegated out of the first tier. To determine which conference sees a club promoted, the top club from each of the two leagues that meets the other requirements for being in the Premier compete in a playoff.

European qualification

RankAssociationCoefficient
47MDA Moldova5.500
48WAL Wales5.000
48FRO Faroe Islands5.000

UEFA grants European places to the Football Association of Wales, determined by Wales' position in the UEFA country coefficient rankings. The Welsh Football Association in turn allocates a number of these European places to the final Welsh Premier Women's League positions. As of 2024, Wales was ranked 48th in Europe – granting them one placement in the UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying rounds.

Clubs

2025–26

ClubCityGroundCapacity
Aberystwyth TownAberystwythPark Avenue5,000
Barry Town UnitedBarryJenner Park Stadium2,650
Briton Ferry Llansawel A.F.C. LadiesBriton FerryOld Road Ground2,000
Cardiff CityCardiffCardiff International Sports Stadium4,953
Pontypridd UnitedPontypriddUSW Sport Park1,000
Swansea CityNeathLlandarcy Academy of Sport2,000
The New Saints FCOswestryPark Hall3,000
WrexhamWrexhamThe Rock3,000

List of champions

In the first three seasons, a final between the north and south division winners determined the champion.

SeasonChampionRunners-upThird placeRef
2009–10Swansea CityCaernarfon Town*N/a (Final: 4–0)*
2010–11Swansea CityCaernarfon Town*N/a (Final: 3–1)*
2011–12Cardiff MetWrexham*N/a (Final: 3–0)*
2012–13Cardiff CityCardiff MetWrexham
2013–14Cardiff MetAbergavenny TownCardiff City
2014–15Cardiff MetSwansea CityAbergavenny Town
2015–16Cardiff MetSwansea CityCardiff City
2016–17Swansea CityCardiff MetCardiff City
2017–18Cardiff MetSwansea CityAbergavenny Town
2018–19Cardiff MetSwansea CityCardiff City
2019–20Swansea CityCardiff MetCardiff City
2020–21Swansea CityCardiff MetCardiff City
2021–22Swansea CityCardiff MetCardiff Citytitle=Season in review 2020-21 Swansea City Ladiesurl=https://www.swanseacity.com/news/season-review-2020-21-swansea-city-ladieswebsite=Swansea Citydate=12 June 2021access-date=11 August 2024}}
2022–23Cardiff CitySwansea CityCardiff Met
2023–24Cardiff CitySwansea CityWrexham
2024–25Cardiff CityBriton Ferry LlansawelThe New Saints
TitlesTeam
6Cardiff Met
6Swansea City
4Cardiff City

References

References

  1. "Women's association club coefficients". [[UEFA]].
  2. "Aberystwyth Town FC: Ladies News".
  3. (27 April 2012). "Wrexham Odds on for Play-off place". shekicks.net.
  4. "Archived copy".
  5. Tenby Observer. (14 October 2010). "Manorbier Ladies call it a day".
  6. (2021-05-31). "Women's football: FAW announce the make-up of new tiers – BBC Sport". Bbc.com.
  7. "Abergavenny condemns FAW restructure of Welsh women's football". The National Wales.
  8. (June 2021). "Welsh Premier Women's League shake-up 'unjust and wrong', say relegated clubs – BBC News". BBC News.
  9. "FAW chief Lowri Roberts responds to restructuring outcry". The National Wales.
  10. (16 August 2021). "Launch of Genero Adran Leagues marks new era for domestic football in Wales". Cymru Football.
  11. "Welsh Premier Women's League 2018/19 Rules".
  12. (9 August 2022). "Genero Adran Leagues and Adran Trophy competition formats confirmed for 2022/23". Adran Leagues.
  13. (17 April 2017). "Net draw hands Swansea Welsh title". shekicks.net.
  14. (23 April 2018). "#WPWL: Cardiff Met secure title for fifth time". shekicks.net.
  15. (2019-03-27). "Summary – Welsh Premier Women's League – Wales – Results, fixtures, tables and news".
  16. "Summary – Welsh Premier Women's League – Wales – Results, fixtures, tables and news – Women Soccerway".
  17. "Summary – Welsh Premier Women's League – Wales – Results, fixtures, tables and news – Women Soccerway".
  18. (12 June 2021). "Season in review 2020-21 Swansea City Ladies".
  19. (26 March 2023). "City secure the 2022/23 Adran Premier title".
  20. (7 May 2024). "Cardiff City FC Women 23/24 Season in Review".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Adran Premier — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report