Date | R | Domáci vs Hostia | - |
---|---|---|---|
04/28 12:00 | 3 | [6] St Gallen ženy vs Bazilej ženy [3] | 1-1 |
04/13 15:00 | 18 | [1] Servette FC Chenois ženy vs FC Zürich ženy [2] | 0-3 |
04/13 15:00 | 18 | Bazilej ženy vs FC Rapperswil-Jona ženy | 5-1 |
04/13 15:00 | 18 | [4] Young Boys ženy vs FC Luzern ženy [7] | 2-0 |
04/13 15:00 | 18 | St Gallen ženy vs Aarau ženy | 3-2 |
04/13 15:00 | 18 | Grasshopper ženy vs FC Rot-Schwarz Thun ženy | 4-1 |
03/30 18:00 | 17 | FC Luzern ženy vs St Gallen ženy | 3-2 |
03/30 17:00 | 17 | Bazilej ženy vs Young Boys ženy | 1-0 |
03/30 16:30 | 17 | FC Rot-Schwarz Thun ženy vs Servette FC Chenois ženy | 0-5 |
03/30 15:00 | 17 | FC Rapperswil-Jona ženy vs FC Zürich ženy | 0-1 |
03/30 15:00 | 17 | Aarau ženy vs Grasshopper ženy | 1-1 |
03/23 19:30 | 16 | [1] Servette FC Chenois ženy vs Bazilej ženy [3] | 2-1 |
The Swiss Women's Super League is the highest-level league competition for women's football clubs in Switzerland. It was established in 1970 (formerly named Nationalliga A).
League winners qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League. The team that end as number 10 relegate to the Nationalliga B.
The Super League replaced the Nationalliga A as the highest level of women's football in Switzerland from 2020–21 onwards.
The founder and first president was Ursula Moser. On 24 April 1970, the Schweizerische Damenfussball-Liga (SDFL), today's Nationalliga A, was founded. A year earlier, the clubs of Yverdon, Serrières, Sainte-Croix, Boudry, La-Chaux-de-Fonds and Sion had merged to form the Association Romande de Football Féminin (ARFF). The first unofficial championship in French-speaking Switzerland in 1969/70 was won by DFC Sion. The Swiss Women's Football League initially consisted of 18 clubs divided into three regions. The first official champion was DFC Aarau. In 1975, the Swiss Cup was launched. The first cup winner was DFC Sion. On 15 May 1993, the decision was made to integrate the clubs into the Swiss Football Association.