2003 FIRA Women's European Championship
The seventh tournament featured only eight teams, divided into pools A and B. For the first time the A and B pools were also organised as separate competitions in different venues, and in different weeks. The A Pool in Malmö was won by Spain, and the B pool by Netherlands. France and Spain were represented by their respective "A" teams.
Netherlands' win was the first time a host team had won an official FIRA championship (France had won the unofficial title as hosts in 1988)
2003 FIRA Women's European Championship | |
---|---|
2003-05-01 - 2003-05-11 | |
Host nations | Sweden and |
Netherlands | |
No. of nations | 8 |
Champions | Spain |
Runner-up | France |
Matches played | 8 |
Pool A (at Malmö, Sweden)
Semi-finals
[411] | |||||
2003-05-01 | Sweden | 0-9 | France | Malmö, Sweden | [31/86/2] |
[412] | |||||
2003-05-01 | Italy | 5-29 | Spain | Malmö, Sweden | [40/54/5] |
3rd/4th Place
[413] | |||||
2003-05-03 | Sweden | 15-10 | Italy | Malmö, Sweden | [32/41/2] |
Final
[414] | |||||
2003-05-03 | France | 10-16 | Spain | Malmö, Sweden | [87/55/13] |
Pool B (at Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Semi-finals
[415] | |||||
2003-05-08 | Denmark | 0-113 | Netherlands | Amsterdam, Netherlands | [1/60/1] |
[416] | |||||
2003-05-08 | Germany | 75-0 | Norway | Amsterdam, Netherlands | [39/1/1] |
3rd/4th Place
[417] | |||||
2003-05-11 | Denmark | 10-10 | Norway | Amsterdam, Netherlands | [2/2/1] |
Final
[418] | |||||
2003-05-11 | Netherlands | 19-12 | Germany | Amsterdam, Netherlands | [61/40/13] |
External links
See also
Preceded by 2002 FIRA Women's European Nations Cup |
FIRA Women's European Championship 2003 Spain |
Succeeded by 2004 FIRA Women's European Championship |
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 17, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.