From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Slavia Prague
logo
Full nameSportovní klub Slavia Praha Ženy
Ground Dolní Měcholupy, Prague
Capacity3,400
ChairmanJaroslav Tvrdík
Manager Karel Piták
League First League
2022–231st
Website Club website

SK Slavia Praha Ženy is a Czech women's football team from Prague representing SK Slavia Prague. It competes in the Czech First Division.

History

Slavia was a pioneer in women's football in Czechoslovakia, and won the first three editions of the Czech SR Championship between 1970 and 1972. It subsequently won six more trophies until 1989, when a final between the Czech and Slovak champions was organized. Slavia were the Czechoslovakian champions in 1992 and 1993.

Slavia lineup in 2017, before the game against Stjarnan.

However, rivals Sparta Prague gained the upper hand in the new Czech League following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. Slavia won the championship for the first time in 2003 [1] and played the 2003-04 UEFA Women's Cup, where it was knocked out in the group stage by defending champion Umea IK. It has always been the league's runner-up since, ranking second to Sparta. [2] In 2011 they were close to winning their first national Cup, but lost the final to Sparta in the penalty shootout. [3] The same happened again in 2013.

In 2014 the team won the double, ending a nine-year-old winning streak of Sparta in the league. It also marked the first time Sparta didn't win the cup.

Honours

Record in UEFA Competitions

All results (home and away) list Slavia's goal tally first.

Season Competition Stage Result Opponent
2003–04 UEFA Women's Cup Group Stage 2–0 Romania Clujana
3–0 Northern Ireland Newtownabbey Strikers
1–2 Sweden Umea
2004–05 UEFA Women's Cup Group Stage 4–0 Slovakia Žiar nad Hronom
3–0 Bulgaria Super Sport Sofia
1–2 Kazakhstan Alma
2014–15 Champions League Round of 32 0–1 (H), 0–3 (A) Spain Barcelona
2015–16 Champions League Round of 32 4–1 (H), 0–1 (A) Denmark Brøndby
Round of 16 2–1 (H), 0–0 (A) Russia Zvezda Perm
Quarter-final 1–9 (A), 0–0 (H) France Lyon
2016–17 Champions League Round of 32 1–1 (A), 3–2 (H) Cyprus Apollon Limassol
Round of 16 1–3 (H), 0–3 (A) Sweden FC Rosengård
2017-18 Champions League Round of 32 5–0 (A), 3–0 (H) Greece P.A.O.K
Round of 16 2–1 (A), 0–0 (H) Iceland Stjarnan
Quarter-final 0–5 (A), 1–1 (H) Germany VfL Wolfsburg
2018-19 Champions League Qualifying round 7–2 Turkey Ataşehir Belediyespor
4–0 Kosovo Mitrovica
4–1 Hungary MTK Hungária
Round of 32 3–0 (A), 4–0 (H) Lithuania Gintra Universitetas
Round of 16 3–2 (A), 0–0 (H) Sweden FC Rosengård
Quarter-final 1–1 (H), 1–5 (A) Germany Bayern Munich
2019-20 Champions League Round of 32 4–1 (A), 5–1 (H) Scotland Hibernian
Round of 16 2–5 (H), 0–8 (A) England Arsenal
2020-21 Champions League Round of 32 2–2 (A), 0–1 (H) Italy Fiorentina
2021-22 Champions League Round 2 0–3 (A), 0–4 (H) England Arsenal
2022-23 Champions League Round 2 1–0 (A), 0–0 (H) Iceland Valur
Group stage 0–2 (H), 0–0 (A) Germany VfL Wolfsburg
0–1 (A), 0–3 (H) Italy Roma
0–1 (H), 1–1 (A) Austria St. Pölten
2023-24 Champions League Round 2 5–0 (H), 6–0 (A) Romania U Olimpia Cluj
Group stage 0–9 (H) France Lyon
Norway Brann
Austria St. Pölten

Overview

Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win%
UEFA Women's Cup 6 4 0 2 14 4 +10 066.67
UEFA Women's Champions League 43 15 11 17 65 76 −11 034.88
Total 49 19 11 19 76 80 −4 038.78

Players

Current squad

As of July 2023 [4]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Czech Republic  CZE Olivie Lukášová
4 MF Czech Republic  CZE Denisa Tenkrátová
5 DF United States  USA Michelle Xiao
6 DF Czech Republic  CZE Michaela Khýrová
7 DF Czech Republic  CZE Simona Necidová
8 MF Czech Republic  CZE Kristýna Růžičková
9 FW Kenya  KEN Marjolen Nekesa
10 MF Slovakia  SVK Martina Šurnovská
11 FW Czech Republic  CZE Franny Černá
12 MF Czech Republic  CZE Denisa Veselá
13 DF Slovakia  SVK Kristína Košíková (on loan from Slovan Liberec)
14 DF Czech Republic  CZE Lucie Bendová
16 FW Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Szewieczková
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF Czech Republic  CZE Gabriela Šlajsová
18 MF Czech Republic  CZE Albina Goretkiová
19 MF Czech Republic  CZE Petra Divišová
20 DF Slovakia  SVK Diana Bartovičová
21 MF Czech Republic  CZE Kateřina Svitková (on loan from Chelsea)
23 FW Czech Republic  CZE Karolína Křivská
25 MF Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Krejčiříková
26 GK Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Fuchsová
28 FW Slovakia  SVK Tamara Morávková
29 MF Slovakia  SVK Aneta Surová
30 MF United States  USA Molly McLaughlin
77 DF Jamaica  JAM Alika Keene
MF Czech Republic  CZE Kateřina Vithová

Former players

References

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Slavia Prague
logo
Full nameSportovní klub Slavia Praha Ženy
Ground Dolní Měcholupy, Prague
Capacity3,400
ChairmanJaroslav Tvrdík
Manager Karel Piták
League First League
2022–231st
Website Club website

SK Slavia Praha Ženy is a Czech women's football team from Prague representing SK Slavia Prague. It competes in the Czech First Division.

History

Slavia was a pioneer in women's football in Czechoslovakia, and won the first three editions of the Czech SR Championship between 1970 and 1972. It subsequently won six more trophies until 1989, when a final between the Czech and Slovak champions was organized. Slavia were the Czechoslovakian champions in 1992 and 1993.

Slavia lineup in 2017, before the game against Stjarnan.

However, rivals Sparta Prague gained the upper hand in the new Czech League following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. Slavia won the championship for the first time in 2003 [1] and played the 2003-04 UEFA Women's Cup, where it was knocked out in the group stage by defending champion Umea IK. It has always been the league's runner-up since, ranking second to Sparta. [2] In 2011 they were close to winning their first national Cup, but lost the final to Sparta in the penalty shootout. [3] The same happened again in 2013.

In 2014 the team won the double, ending a nine-year-old winning streak of Sparta in the league. It also marked the first time Sparta didn't win the cup.

Honours

Record in UEFA Competitions

All results (home and away) list Slavia's goal tally first.

Season Competition Stage Result Opponent
2003–04 UEFA Women's Cup Group Stage 2–0 Romania Clujana
3–0 Northern Ireland Newtownabbey Strikers
1–2 Sweden Umea
2004–05 UEFA Women's Cup Group Stage 4–0 Slovakia Žiar nad Hronom
3–0 Bulgaria Super Sport Sofia
1–2 Kazakhstan Alma
2014–15 Champions League Round of 32 0–1 (H), 0–3 (A) Spain Barcelona
2015–16 Champions League Round of 32 4–1 (H), 0–1 (A) Denmark Brøndby
Round of 16 2–1 (H), 0–0 (A) Russia Zvezda Perm
Quarter-final 1–9 (A), 0–0 (H) France Lyon
2016–17 Champions League Round of 32 1–1 (A), 3–2 (H) Cyprus Apollon Limassol
Round of 16 1–3 (H), 0–3 (A) Sweden FC Rosengård
2017-18 Champions League Round of 32 5–0 (A), 3–0 (H) Greece P.A.O.K
Round of 16 2–1 (A), 0–0 (H) Iceland Stjarnan
Quarter-final 0–5 (A), 1–1 (H) Germany VfL Wolfsburg
2018-19 Champions League Qualifying round 7–2 Turkey Ataşehir Belediyespor
4–0 Kosovo Mitrovica
4–1 Hungary MTK Hungária
Round of 32 3–0 (A), 4–0 (H) Lithuania Gintra Universitetas
Round of 16 3–2 (A), 0–0 (H) Sweden FC Rosengård
Quarter-final 1–1 (H), 1–5 (A) Germany Bayern Munich
2019-20 Champions League Round of 32 4–1 (A), 5–1 (H) Scotland Hibernian
Round of 16 2–5 (H), 0–8 (A) England Arsenal
2020-21 Champions League Round of 32 2–2 (A), 0–1 (H) Italy Fiorentina
2021-22 Champions League Round 2 0–3 (A), 0–4 (H) England Arsenal
2022-23 Champions League Round 2 1–0 (A), 0–0 (H) Iceland Valur
Group stage 0–2 (H), 0–0 (A) Germany VfL Wolfsburg
0–1 (A), 0–3 (H) Italy Roma
0–1 (H), 1–1 (A) Austria St. Pölten
2023-24 Champions League Round 2 5–0 (H), 6–0 (A) Romania U Olimpia Cluj
Group stage 0–9 (H) France Lyon
Norway Brann
Austria St. Pölten

Overview

Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win%
UEFA Women's Cup 6 4 0 2 14 4 +10 066.67
UEFA Women's Champions League 43 15 11 17 65 76 −11 034.88
Total 49 19 11 19 76 80 −4 038.78

Players

Current squad

As of July 2023 [4]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Czech Republic  CZE Olivie Lukášová
4 MF Czech Republic  CZE Denisa Tenkrátová
5 DF United States  USA Michelle Xiao
6 DF Czech Republic  CZE Michaela Khýrová
7 DF Czech Republic  CZE Simona Necidová
8 MF Czech Republic  CZE Kristýna Růžičková
9 FW Kenya  KEN Marjolen Nekesa
10 MF Slovakia  SVK Martina Šurnovská
11 FW Czech Republic  CZE Franny Černá
12 MF Czech Republic  CZE Denisa Veselá
13 DF Slovakia  SVK Kristína Košíková (on loan from Slovan Liberec)
14 DF Czech Republic  CZE Lucie Bendová
16 FW Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Szewieczková
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF Czech Republic  CZE Gabriela Šlajsová
18 MF Czech Republic  CZE Albina Goretkiová
19 MF Czech Republic  CZE Petra Divišová
20 DF Slovakia  SVK Diana Bartovičová
21 MF Czech Republic  CZE Kateřina Svitková (on loan from Chelsea)
23 FW Czech Republic  CZE Karolína Křivská
25 MF Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Krejčiříková
26 GK Czech Republic  CZE Tereza Fuchsová
28 FW Slovakia  SVK Tamara Morávková
29 MF Slovakia  SVK Aneta Surová
30 MF United States  USA Molly McLaughlin
77 DF Jamaica  JAM Alika Keene
MF Czech Republic  CZE Kateřina Vithová

Former players

References

External links



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