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UEFA Women's Euro 2001


FieldValue
tourney_nameUEFA Women's Euro 2001
imageUlm Donaustadion 1.jpg
captionDonaustadion in Ulm, Germany, the venue of the final
other_titlesFußball-Europameisterschaft der Frauen 2001
countryGermany
dates23 June – 7 July
num_teams8
venues5
cities5
champion_other
count5
second_other
matches15
goals40
attendance
top_scorerGER Claudia Müller
GER Sandra Smisek
(3 goals each)
playerSWE Hanna Ljungberg
prevseason1997
nextseason2005

GER Sandra Smisek (3 goals each)

The 2001 UEFA Women's Championship, commonly referred to as the 2001 Women's Euros or just the 2001 Euros, was the eighth UEFA Women's Championship, a competition for the women's national football teams and member associations of UEFA. It took place in Germany between 23 June and 7 July 2001. It was won by Germany for the record-extending fifth time overall and third in a row with a 1–0 win in the final against Sweden, after a golden goal at the end of the final.

Qualification

Main article: UEFA Women's Euro 2001 qualifying{{!}}2001 UEFA Women's Championship qualification

16 competing teams formed 4 groups; the winners of each group qualified for the Championship, while the teams finishing second and third had to play a playoff in order to qualify.

Qualified teams

CountryQualified asQualified onPrevious appearances in tournament1
Group 1 winner1 (1997)
Group 2 winner6 (*1987*, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997)
(hosts)Group 3 winner5 (*1989*,2 1991, 1993, *1995*, 1997)
Group 4 winner1 (1997)
Play-off winner5 (1984, 1987, 1989, 1995, 1997)
Play-off winner4 (1984, 1991, 1993, 1997)
Play-off winner6 (1984, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1997)
Play-off winner3 (1984, 1987, 1995)

:1 Bold indicates champion for that year. Italic indicates host for that year :2 As West Germany

Squads

For a list of all squads that played in the final tournament, see UEFA Women's Euro 2001 squads

Results

Group stage

Group A

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
3300111+109
320163+36
301217−61
301218−71

SvFF Report (in Swedish) DFB Report (in German) Report Meinert

RFS Report (in Russian) Report

DFB Report (in German) RFS Report (in Russian) Report Prinz Meinert Smisek

SvFF Report (in Swedish) Report Bengtsson Ljungberg Eriksson

DFB Report (in German) Report Wiegmann Lingor

SvFF Report (in Swedish) RFS Report (in Russian) Report

Group B

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
320165+16
311142+24
311134−14
310257−23

DBU Report (in Danish) Report

Report (in French) NFF Report (in Norwegian) Report Sykora Mellgren

Report (in French) DBU Report (in Danish) Report Mugneret-Béghé Blouin Bonde Andersson

NFF Report (in Norwegian) Report

DBU Report (in Danish) NFF Report (in Norwegian) Report

Report (in French) Report Jézéquel

Knockout stage

|4 July – Ulm||1||0 |4 July – Ulm||0||1 |7 July – Ulm|**** |1||0}}

Semi-finals

NFF Report (in Norwegian) DFB Report (in German) Report

DBU Report (in Danish) SvFF Report (in Swedish) Report

Final

Main article: UEFA Women's Euro 2001 final

SvFF Report (in Swedish) DFB Report (in German) Report

Goalscorers

;3 goals

  • GER Claudia Müller
  • GER Sandra Smisek

;2 goals

  • DEN Gitte Krogh
  • FRA Marinette Pichon
  • GER Maren Meinert
  • GER Bettina Wiegmann
  • ITA Patrizia Panico
  • NOR Dagny Mellgren
  • SWE Hanna Ljungberg

;1 goal

  • DEN Julie Hauge Andersson
  • DEN Christina Bonde
  • DEN Julie Rydahl Bukh
  • DEN Merete Pedersen
  • ENG Angela Banks
  • FRA Stéphanie Mugneret-Béghé
  • FRA Gaëlle Blouin
  • FRA Françoise Jézéquel
  • GER Renate Lingor
  • GER Birgit Prinz
  • GER Petra Wimbersky
  • ITA Rita Guarino
  • NOR Monica Knudsen
  • RUS Alexandra Svetlitskaya
  • SWE Kristin Bengtsson
  • SWE Sofia Eriksson
  • SWE Linda Fagerström
  • SWE Tina Nordlund
  • SWE Jane Törnqvist

;Own goal

  • FRA Emmanuelle Sykora (playing against Norway)

References

References

  1. (7 July 2001). "Germany retain Euro crown". British Broadcasting Corporation.
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