List of UEFA Women's Championship records

This is a list of records of the UEFA Women's Championship and its qualification matches.

General statistics by tournament

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YearHostChampionWinning coachWinning captainTop scorer(s)Golden Player award
1984Various  Sweden Ulf Lyfors Anette Börjesson Pia Sundhage (3) Pia Sundhage
1987  Norway  Norway Erling Hokstad Heidi Støre Trude Stendal (3) Heidi Støre
1989  West Germany  West Germany Gero Bisanz Silvia Neid Sissel Grude (2)
Ursula Lohn (2)
Doris Fitschen
1991  Denmark  Germany Gero Bisanz Silvia Neid Heidi Mohr (4) Silvia Neid
1993  Italy  Norway Even Pellerud Heidi Støre Susan Mackensie (2) Hege Riise
1995Various  Germany Gero Bisanz Silvia Neid Lena Videkull (3) Birgit Prinz
1997  Norway
 Sweden
 Germany Tina Theune Martina Voss Carolina Morace (4)
Marianne Pettersen (4)
Angélique Roujas (4)
Carolina Morace
2001  Germany  Germany Tina Theune Doris Fitschen Claudia Müller (3)
Sandra Smisek (3)
Hanna Ljungberg
2005  England  Germany Tina Theune Birgit Prinz Inka Grings (4) Anne Mäkinen
2009  Finland  Germany Silvia Neid Birgit Prinz Inka Grings (6) Inka Grings
2013  Sweden  Germany Silvia Neid Nadine Angerer Lotta Schelin (5) Nadine Angerer
2017  Netherlands  Netherlands Sarina Wiegman Mandy van den Berg Jodie Taylor (5) Lieke Martens
2022  England  England Sarina Wiegman Leah Williamson Beth Mead (6)
Alexandra Popp (6)
Beth Mead
2025   Switzerland
2029

Teams: tournament position

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Teams having equal quantities in the tables below are ordered by the tournament the quantity was attained in (the teams that attained the quantity first are listed first). If the quantity was attained by more than one team in the same tournament, these teams are ordered alphabetically.

Most titles won
8,  Germany (1989, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013).[1]
Most finishes in the top two
9,  Germany (1989, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2022).[1]
Most finishes in the top four
10,  Germany (1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2022).[1]
Most championship appearances
12,  Italy and  Norway.[2]

Consecutive

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Most consecutive championships
6,  Germany (1995–2013).[1]
Most consecutive finishes in the top two
6,  Germany (1995–2013).[1]
Most consecutive finishes in the top four
9,  Germany (1989–2013).[1]
Most consecutive appearances in the finals
12,  Norway (1987–2022).[3]

Gaps

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Longest gap between successive titles
6 years,  Norway (1987–1993).
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two
25 years,  England (1984–2009).
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four
14 years,  England (1995–2009).
Longest gap between successive appearances in the finals
16 years,  Spain (1997-2013).

Host team

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Best finish by host team
Champion:  Norway (1987),  Germany (1989, 2001),  Netherlands (2017) and  England (2022).[4]
Worst finish by host team
Group stage:  Norway (1997) and  England (2005).

Defending champion

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Best finish by defending champion
Champion:  Germany (1991, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013).
Worst finish by defending champion
Quarterfinal:  Germany (2017) and  Netherlands (2022).

Debuting teams

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Best finish by a debuting team
Champion:  Sweden (1984),  Norway (1987) and  Germany (1989).

Other

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Most finishes in the top two without ever being champion
2,  Italy (1993, 1997).
Most finishes in the top four without ever being champion
6,  Italy (1984-1993, 1997).
Most appearances without ever being champion
12,  Italy (1984-1993, 1997-2022).
Most finishes in the top four without ever finishing in the top two
1,  Spain (1997),  Finland (2005),  Austria (2017) and  France (2022).
Most appearances without ever finishing in the top two
7,  France (1997-2022).
Most appearances without ever finishing in the top four
5,  Russia (1997-2001, 2009-2017).
Teams that overcame tournament champion
 Norway, 2013 (1–0 vs Germany).
Most played final
4,  Germany vs  Norway (1989, 1991, 2005, 2013).[5]
Most played match
10,  Germany vs  Norway (1989, 1991, 1997, 2001, 2005 (2x), 2009 (2x), 2013 (2x)).

Coaches: tournament position

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Most championships
3, Gero Bisanz (  Germany, 1989–1991, 1995) and Tina Theune (  Germany, 1997–2005).[1]
Most finishes in the top two
3, Gero Bisanz (  Germany, 1989–1991, 1995); Tina Theune (  Germany, 1997–2005); Even Pellerud (  Norway, 1991–1993, 2013).
Most finishes in the top four
4, Gero Bisanz (  Germany, 1989–1995); Sergio Guenza (  Italy, 1989–1993, 1997); Even Pellerud (  Norway, 1991–1995, 2013).

Teams: matches played and goals scored

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All time

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Most matches played
46,  Germany.[1]
Most wins
36,  Germany.[1]
Fewest wins
0,  Northern Ireland.
Most losses
20,  Italy.
Fewest losses
2,  Austria,  Scotland,  Ukraine.
Most draws
8,  Denmark,  France.
Most goals scored
107,  Germany.[1]
Most goals conceded
63,  Italy.
Fewest goals scored
1,  Northern Ireland.
Fewest goals conceded
4,  Austria,  Ukraine.
Highest goal difference
+80,  Germany.
Lowest goal difference
-25,  Italy.

In one tournament

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Most wins
6,  Germany (2009),  Netherlands (2017),  England (2022).
Most goals scored
22,  England, 2022.[4]
Most goals scored, group stage
14,  England, 2022.[6]
Most goals scored, champions
22,  England, 2022.[4]
Most goals scored, hosts
22,  England, 2022.[4]
Fewest goals scored, champions
2,  Norway, 1993.
Fewest goals scored, hosts
1,  Italy, 1993.
Most goals conceded, champions
5,  Germany, 2009.
Fewest goals conceded, champions
0,  Norway, 1993.

Streaks

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Most consecutive wins
19,  Germany, from 2–0 vs Denmark (1997) to 6–2 vs England (2009).[1]
Most consecutive matches without a loss
26,  Germany, from 4–1 vs England (1995) to 3–0 vs Iceland (2013).
Most consecutive losses
6,  Russia, from 0–5 vs Germany (2001) to 1–3 vs France (2013).
Most consecutive matches without a win
12,  Russia, from 1–2 vs Sweden (1997) to 1–1 vs Spain (2013).
Most consecutive Top-scoring team
3,  Germany (2001–2009).

Individual

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Most championships
5, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-2009) and Nadine Angerer (  Germany, 1997-2013).
Most medals
5, Heidi Støre (  Norway, 1987-1995); Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-2009); Nadine Angerer (  Germany, 1997-2013).
Most matches played, final tournaments
23, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-2009).[1]
Most matches played, including qualifying
61, Gillian Coultard (  England, 1981-2000).[7]
Most knockout games played, final tournaments
11, Doris Fitschen (  Germany, 1989-2001) and Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-2009).
Most appearances in a championship final
5, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-2009).[1]
Most appearances as captain
11, Katrine Pedersen (  Denmark, 2005-2013).
Most tournaments as captain
5, Heidi Støre (  Norway, 1987-1995).[3]
Youngest player
16 years, 156 days, Oksana Yakovyshyn (  Ukraine), vs Netherlands, 23 August 2009.[8]
Oldest player
39 years, 340 days, Sandrine Soubeyrand (  France), vs Denmark, 22 July 2013.[8]
Oldest captain
39 years, 340 days, Sandrine Soubeyrand (  France), vs Denmark, 22 July 2013.
Largest age difference on the same team
23 years, 147 days, 2009,  Ukraine (Olena Mazurenko: 39 years, 303 days; Oksana Yakovyshyn: 16 years, 156 days).

Goalscoring

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Individual

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Most goals scored, final tournaments
10, Inka Grings (  Germany, 1997–2009) and Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995–2009).[9]
Most goals scored, qualifying
37, Margrét Lára Viðarsdóttir (  Iceland, 2003–2019).[10]
Most goals scored, final tournaments and qualifying
42, Carolina Morace (  Italy, 1984–1997).[10]
Most goals scored in a tournament
6, Inka Grings (  Germany, 2009), Beth Mead (  England, 2022) and Alexandra Popp (  Germany, 2022).
Most goals scored in a match
4, Marianne Pettersen (  Norway), vs Denmark, 1997.[11]
Most goals scored in a qualifying match
7, María Paz Vilas (  Spain), vs Kazakhstan, 2013.[12]
Most goals scored in all final matches
5, Birgit Prinz (  Germany), 1 vs Sweden in 1995, 1 vs Italy in 1997, 1 vs Norway in 2005 & 2 vs England in 2009.
Most matches with at least one goal
9, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995–2009).
Most consecutive matches with at least one goal
5, Alexandra Popp (  Germany, 2022).
Most matches with at least two goals
3, Heidi Mohr (  Germany, 1991, 1995) and Inka Grings (  Germany, 2005–2009).
Fastest hat-trick
18 minutes, Lena Videkull (  Sweden), scored at 59', 61' and 76', vs Norway, 1995.[11]
Fastest hat-trick from kickoff
45 minutes, Grace Geyoro (  France), scored at 9', 40' and 45', vs Italy, 2022.[11]
Most tournaments with at least one goals
5, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995–2009).[9]
Most tournaments with at least two goals
4, Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 1995-1997, 2005-2009).
Most tournaments with at least three goals
2, Inka Grings (  Germany, 2005-2009).
Most tournaments with at least four goals
2, Inka Grings (  Germany, 2005-2009).
Longest period between a player's first and last goals
14 years, 199 days: Birgit Prinz (  Germany, 23 February 1995 – 10 September 2009).[8]
Longest period between one goal and the next
12 years, 308 days: Linda Sällström (  Finland, 3 September 2009 – 8 July 2022).
Youngest goalscorer
16 years, 351 days, Isabell Herlovsen (  Norway), vs France, 9 June 2005.[6]
Youngest hat-trick scorer
22 years, 79 days, Marianne Pettersen (  Norway), vs Denmark, 30 June 1997.[11]
Youngest goalscorer, final
17 years, 152 days, Birgit Prinz (  Germany), vs Sweden, 26 March 1995.
Oldest goalscorer
37 years, 33 days, Julie Nelson (  Northern Ireland), vs Norway, 7 July 2022.[6]
Oldest hat-trick scorer
32 years, 89 days, Lena Videkull (  Sweden), vs Norway, 5 March 1995.[11]
Oldest goalscorer, final
31 years, 320 days, Birgit Prinz (  Germany), vs England, 10 September 2009.
Fastest goal from kickoff in a final
6th minute, Malin Andersson (  Sweden), vs Germany, 1995.[5]
Latest goal from kickoff in a final
98th minute, Claudia Müller (  Germany), vs Sweden, 2001.

Team

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Biggest margin of victory
8,  England (8) vs  Norway (0), 2022.[6]
Biggest margin of victory, qualifying match
17,  Spain (17) vs  Slovenia (0), 1995 Group 7;  Norway (17) vs  Slovakia (0), 1997 Group 1;  Germany (17) vs  Kazakhstan (0), 2013 Group 2.[7]
Most goals scored in a match, one team
8,  England vs  Norway, 2022.[6]
Most goals scored in a final, both teams
8,  Germany (6) vs  England (2), 2009.[6]
Most goals in a tournament, one team
22,  England, 2022.[4]
Most individual goalscorers for one team, one tournament
10,  Germany, 2009 (Fatmire Bajramaj, Melanie Behringer, Linda Bresonik, Inka Grings, Annike Krahn, Kim Kulig, Simone Laudehr, Anja Mittag, Célia Okoyino da Mbabi, Birgit Prinz).
Fewest individual goalscorers for one team, one tournament, champions
2,  Norway, 1993 (Birthe Hegstad, Anne Nymark Andersen).

Tournament

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Most goals scored in a tournament
95 goals, 2022.
Fewest goals scored in a tournament
8 goals, 1993.
Most goals per match in a tournament
5 goals per match, 1995.
Fewest goals per match in a tournament
2 goals per match, 1993.
Most players scoring at least two goals in a tournament
16, 2009.
Most players scoring at least three goals in a tournament
5, 2005, 2009 and 2022.
Most players scoring at least four goals in a tournament
3, 1997 and 2022.
Most players scoring at least five goals in a tournament
2, 2022 - Beth Mead (  England) and Alexandra Popp (  Germany).
Most players scoring at least six goals in a tournament
2, 2022 - Beth Mead (  England) and Alexandra Popp (  Germany).

Top-scoring teams by tournament

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Teams listed in bold won the tournament.

Goalkeeping

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Most matches played, finals
17: Hedvig Lindahl (  Sweden, 2005–2009, 2017-2022).
Most clean sheets (matches without conceding)
11: Silke Rottenberg (  Germany, 1997–2005).
Most goals conceded, one tournament
14, Rachel Brown (  England, 2009).
Fewest goals conceded, one tournament, champions
0, Reidun Seth (  Norway, 1993).
Youngest goalkeeper
17 years, 110 days: Eva Russo (  Italy), vs Sweden, 8 April 1984.
Oldest goalkeeper
39 years, 88 days: Hedvig Lindahl (  Sweden), vs England, 26 July 2022.

Coaching

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Most matches coached
15, Tina Theune (  Germany, 1997–2005) and Hope Powell (  England, 2001–2013).[1]
Most matches won
13, Tina Theune (  Germany, 1997–2005).
Most matches lost
8, Hope Powell (  England, 2001–2013).
Foreign championship
Sarina Wiegman (  England, 2022).[4]
Most tournaments
4, Gero Bisanz (  Germany, 1989–1995), Sergio Guenza (  Italy, 1989–1993, 1997), Even Pellerud (  Norway, 1991–1995, 2013), Hope Powell (  England, 2001–2013).
Youngest coach
34 years, 198 days, Hope Powell (  England), vs Russia, 2001.
Youngest coach, champions
39 years, 354 days, Even Pellerud (  Norway), vs Italy, 1993.
Oldest coach
66 years, 79 days, Kenny Shiels (  Northern Ireland), vs England, 2022.
Oldest coach, champions
59 years, 121 days, Gero Bisanz (  Germany), vs Sweden, 1995.

Discipline

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Most sendings off (tournament)
2, 2001 (in 15 matches); 2017 and 2022 (in 31 matches).
Most cautions (tournament)
90, 2017 (in 31 matches).

Attendance

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Highest attendance in a match
87,192,  England vs  Germany, 31 July 2022, Wembley, London, United Kingdom, 2022.[4]
Highest attendance in a final
87,192,  England vs  Germany, 31 July 2022, Wembley, London, United Kingdom, 2022.[4]
Highest attendance in a qualifying match
24,835,  France vs  Greece, 3 June 2016, Roazhon Park, Rennes, France, 2017 Group 3.[13]
Highest average of attendance per match
18,544, 2022, hosted by England.
Highest attendance in a tournament
574,865, 2022, hosted by England.
Lowest attendance in a tournament
11,500, 1993, hosted by Italy.

Total and average attendance

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YearMatchesAttendance
TotalAverageLowestHighest
1984620,7203,453ENG   DENSemi-finals1,000SWE   ENGFinal5,552
1987414,4283,607SWE   ENGSemi-finals300NOR   SWEFinal8,470
1989435,0008,750NOR   SWE

SWE   ITA
Semi-finals/
Third place match
2,500FRG   NORFinal22,000
1991414,0503,512GER   ITASemi-finals3,000NOR   DENSemi-finals4,850
1993411,5002,875DEN   GERThird place match500NOR   ITAFinal7,000
1995520,5454,109ENG   GERSemi-finals800GER   SWEFinal8,500
199715??NOR   ITARound 1520NOR   GERRound 17,666
20011592,7036,180SWE   RUSSemi-finals820GER   SWEFinal18,000
200515118,4037,894FRA   ITARound 1957ENG   FINRound 129,092
200925134,9075,396RUS   ITARound 11,112FIN   DENRound 116,334
201325216,8888,676RUS   ESPRound 12,157GER   NORFinal41,301
201731247,0417,969ITA   RUSRound 1669NED   DENFinal28,182
202231574,86518,544BEL   ISLRound 13,859ENG   GERFinal87,192

Penalty shootouts

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Most shootouts, team, all-time
4,  Denmark.[14]
Most shootouts, team, tournament
2,  Denmark, 2013 and  Austria, 2017.[14]
Most shootouts, all teams, tournament
2, 2013 and 2017.[14]
Most wins, team, all-time
2,  Denmark and  Norway.[14]
Most losses, team, all-time
2,  Denmark and  France.[14]
Most successful kicks, shootout, one team
8,  Norway, vs Denmark, 1991.[14]
Most successful kicks, shootout, both teams
15,  Norway (8) vs  Denmark (7), 1991.[14]
Most successful kicks, team, all-time
13,  Denmark (in 3 shootouts).[14]
Most successful kicks, team, tournament
8,  Norway, 1991 (in 1 shootouts).[14]
Most successful kicks, all teams, tournament
15, 1991 (in 1 shootouts).[14]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Germany: Their Women's EURO records, titles and stats". UEFA. 24 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Women's EURO 2022: Italy vs Belgium match facts, stats, ones to watch". UEFA. 17 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Norway: Women's EURO records and stats". UEFA. 14 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "England 2-1 Germany (aet): Kelly gives Lionesses Wembley final triumph". UEFA. 31 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b "All the Women's EURO finals: scores, scorers, line-ups and venues". UEFA. 23 June 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Women's EURO final tournament goals: All you need to know". winnquick.com. 19 July 2022.
  7. ^ a b "UEFA Women's EURO facts and figures: Player records, most goals, biggest wins". UEFA. 25 July 2022.
  8. ^ a b c "Women's football records: Most successful Euros team, most individual goals and caps, oldest and youngest players". Sporting News. 24 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Scoring at multiple Women's EUROs". UEFA. 19 July 2022.
  10. ^ a b "UEFA Women's EURO top scorers: All time and by tournament". UEFA. 19 July 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e "All the Women's EURO finals hat-tricks". UEFA. 19 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Germany and Spain in the goals, Finland ahead". UEFA. 5 April 2012.
  13. ^ "Biggest Women's EURO crowds: 2022 finals the best attended ever". UEFA. 21 July 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Women's EURO penalty shoot-out records by national team". UEFA. 20 July 2022.