FA Women's National League Cup

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Women's National League Cup
Hashtag United
(1st title)
Most successful club(s)Arsenal
(10 titles)
2023–24

The Women's National League Cup is an annual English football cup competition, founded in 1991 by the Women's Football Association (WFA). It was renamed the FA Women's Premier League Cup from 1994 to 2018.

The

Football Association
assumed the running of the competition in 1994–95.

Clubs from league levels 1 and 2 competed in the Women's Premier League Cup tournament annually until 2009–10, with Arsenal the most frequent winners, in ten seasons.

FA WSL's League Cup
instead. Since 2011, the most successful clubs in the Premier/National League Cup have been Tottenham and Blackburn with two final victories each.

The current Women's National League Cup is open to the 72 teams in the

Southern divisions, plus the four regional Division One leagues.[2] It is the women's football equivalent to the men's EFL Trophy
of third- and fourth-tier teams, although the competitions are organised by different governing bodies.

Format

The competitions format has changed[when?] having previously also included a preceding group stage prior to the knockout rounds.

After the league restructuring of the Women's Premier League in 2015 up to 72 teams are eligible to participate. At first all teams are drawn against each other in the determining round. The winning teams then are drawn into either a preliminary round or directly into the first round of the cup. Thus 32 teams then play the first round.[3]

The losers of the determining round play a preliminary round and then a round of 32 onwards for the FA Women's National League Plate, first played out in 2015–16.

1993 Wembley final

The old Wembley Stadium

The 1992–93 competition ended with a final at Wembley Stadium. Before a sparse crowd, Arsenal beat Knowsley United 3–0 to retain the trophy.[4]

This was one of very few competitive women's club games known to have been held at the old Wembley Stadium; it also remains the only women's League Cup final to be played at Wembley.

The match was held prior to the 1993 Football League Third Division play-off final. Arsenal manager Vic Akers recalled that the women's teams were not given use of the main dressing rooms.[4]

List of seasons and finals

Level 1 and 2 league cup competition:[1]

Season Winner Runner-up Score Venue
1991–92
Arsenal
Millwall Lionesses 1–0 Alt Park, Huyton
1992–93
Arsenal
Knowsley United
3–0 Wembley, London
1993–94
Arsenal
Doncaster Belles 4–0 Abbey Stadium, Cambridge
1994–95
Wimbledon
Villa Aztecs
2–0 Butlin Road, Rugby
1995–96
Wembley
Doncaster Belles 2–2 (5–3 pen.) Underhill Stadium, Chipping Barnet
1996–97
Millwall Lionesses
Everton
2–1 Underhill Stadium, Chipping Barnet
1997–98
Arsenal
Croydon 0–0 (4–2 pen.) Underhill Stadium, Chipping Barnet
1998–99
Arsenal
Everton
3–1 Prenton Park, Birkenhead
1999–2000
Arsenal
Croydon 4–1 Underhill Stadium, Chipping Barnet
2000–01
Arsenal
Tranmere Rovers 3–0 Deva Stadium, Chester
2001–02
Fulham
Birmingham City
7–1 Adams Park, Wycombe
2002–03
Fulham
Arsenal
1–1 a.e.t. (3–2 pen.)
County Ground
, Swindon
2003–04
Charlton Athletic
Fulham
1–0 Underhill Stadium, Chipping Barnet
2004–05
Arsenal
Charlton Athletic
3–0 Griffin Park, Brentford
2005–06
Charlton Athletic
Arsenal
2–1 Adams Park, Wycombe
2006–07
Arsenal
Leeds United
1–0 Glanford Park, Scunthorpe
2007–08
Everton
Arsenal
1–0 Brisbane Road, Leyton
2008–09
Arsenal
Doncaster Rovers Belles 5–0 Glanford Park, Scunthorpe
2009–10
Leeds Carnegie
Everton
3–1 Spotland, Rochdale

Level 2 and 3 cup competition:

Season Winner Runner-up Score Venue
2010–11
Barnet
Nottingham Forest
0–0 a.e.t. (4–3 pen.) Adams Park, Wycombe
2011–12
Sunderland
Leeds United
2–1 Sixfields Stadium, Northampton
2012–13
Aston Villa
Leeds United
0–0 a.e.t. (5–4 pen.) Bootham Crescent, York

Level 3 and 4 cup competition (Women's Premier League Cup, renamed National League Cup in 2018–19):

Season Winner Runner-up Score Venue
2013–14[5]
Sheffield
Cardiff City 6–2 Pirelli Stadium, Burton upon Trent
2014–15[6]
Charlton Athletic
Sheffield
0–0 a.e.t. (4–2 pen.) Liberty Way, Nuneaton
2015–16
Tottenham Hotspur
Cardiff City 2–1 a.e.t.
Aggborough
, Kidderminster
2016–17
Tottenham Hotspur
Charlton Athletic
0–0 a.e.t. (4–3 pen.)
Lamex Stadium
, Stevenage
2017–18[7]
Blackburn Rovers
Leicester City 3–1
Proact Stadium
, Chesterfield
2018–19[8]
Blackburn Rovers
Crawley Wasps
3–0 Pirelli Stadium, Burton upon Trent
2019–20
Sunderland cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic[9]
2020–21 Competition cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021–22[10] Southampton
Huddersfield Town
3–0 Damson Park, Solihull
2022–23[11] Nottingham Forest Watford 3–2 a.e.t. Pirelli Stadium, Burton upon Trent
2023-24 Hashtag United Newcastle United 2-1 Kenilworth Road, Luton


Performance by club

Club Winners Runners-up Winning Years
Arsenal
10
3
1991–92, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2004–05, 2006–07, 2008–09
Croydon/Charlton Athletic
3
3
2003–04, 2005–06, 2014–15
Fulham
2
1
2001–02, 2002–03
Wembley/Barnet
2
-
1995–96, 2010–11
Blackburn Rovers
2
-
2017–18, 2018–19[7]
Tottenham Hotspur
2
-
2015–16, 2016–17
Leeds United
1
3
2009–2010
Everton
1
2
2007–08
Millwall Lionesses
1
1
1996–97
Villa Aztecs/Aston Villa
1
1
2012–13
Sheffield
1
1
2013–14
Nottingham Forest
1
1
2022–23
Wimbledon
1
-
1994–95
Sunderland
1
-
2011–12
Southampton
1
-
2021–22
Hashtag United
1
-
2023-24
Doncaster Belles/
Doncaster Rovers Belles
-
3
Cardiff City
-
2
Knowsley United
-
1
Birmingham City
-
1
Tranmere Rovers
-
1
Leicester City
-
1
Crawley Wasps
-
1
Huddersfield Town
-
1
Watford
-
1
Newcastle United
-
1

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "England – List of Women League Cup Winners". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 25 May 2012.
  2. ^ "FA women's football leagues and competitions".
  3. ^ "Premier League Cup and Plate Preliminary rounds". shekicks.net. 1 September 2014. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  4. ^ a b Garry, Tom. "Vic Akers: The legendary Arsenal Ladies manager who won 10 Women's FA Cups". BBC Sport. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  5. ^ Carla Ward hits treble as Sheffield FC win FA Women's Premier League Cup
  6. ^ Charlton Athletic win FA Women's Premier League Cup
  7. ^ a b Rovers Ladies win League Cup! 2018
  8. ^ "Apr 28, Crawley Wasps Ladies 0 Blackburn Rovers Ladies 3 | the FA Women's National League".
  9. ^ "Women's season comes to premature end". Stoke City F.C. 27 March 2020. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  10. ^ "Saints secure league and cup double". Southampton F.C. 24 April 2022. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  11. ^ "Nottingham Forest: Reds focused on title hopes after Women's National League Cup win". BBC Sport. 27 April 2023. Retrieved 1 May 2023.

External links