List of Atlético Madrid Femenino seasons

This is a list of seasons played by Atlético Madrid Femenino, Atlético Madrid's women's section in Spanish and European football, from the creation of its original incarnation, Atlético Villa de Madrid, to the latest completed season.

Key

Champions Runners-up Promoted Relegated

Seasons

Domestic and international results of Atlético Madrid Féminas
Season League Cup Europe Top scorer
Tier Division Pos P W D L F A Pts Name(s) Goals
1989–90 1 Liga Nacional 1st 22 20 1 1 121 33 41
1990–91 1 2nd 14 9 2 3 32 22 20 SF
1991–92 1 7th 13 3 3 7 35 43 9
The team was disestablished after the 1991–92 season, and remained inactive for nine seasons
2001–02 4 Primera Regional 1st
2002–03 3 Preferente 1st 26 20 4 2 93 18 64
2003–04 2 Primera Nacional (Group 4) 2nd 26 17 6 3 49 17 57
2004–05 2 2nd 24 20 3 1 91 23 63
2005–06 2 1st 25 24 0 1 114 13 72
2006–07 1 Superliga 8th 26 8 7 11 31 46 31 QF
2007–08 1 7th 26 11 3 12 36 42 36 SF
2008–09 1 7th 30 14 6 10 49 33 48 QF
2009–10 1 4th 24 12 6 8 51 39 42 R16
2010–11 1 5th 26 14 4 8 53 39 46 SF
2011–12 1 Primera División 6th 34 20 5 9 83 41 65 Spain Adriana Martín 25
2012–13 1 3rd 30 20 8 2 70 21 SF
2013–14 1 3rd 30 16 6 8 72 35 54 QF Spain Amanda Sampedro 16
2014–15 1 2nd 30 20 9 1 54 21 69 SF Spain Priscila Borja 17
2015–16 1 3rd 30 22 3 5 83 24 69 W Champions League R16 Spain Sonia Bermúdez 20
2016–17 1 1st 30 24 6 0 92 17 78 RU Spain Sonia Bermúdez 32

Season-by-season

2015–16

In this season Atlético took part for the first time in the UEFA Women's Champions League. After managing to overcome a 0–2 home loss against Zorky Krasnogorsk through a 0–3 away win in what turned out to be Zorky's last game before its disbandment, the team was knocked out in the Round of 16 by eventual champion Olympique Lyonnais by a wide aggregate. Meanwhile, they had chained nine wins in a row in the national championship, starting with a 9–1 win over Albacete which was their widest win in the top tier yet, and reached December at the top of the table. However, the team lost the lead after earning one point out of the next three games. A 7-game winning streak followed, but after conceding one draw and three loses through April and May Atlético ended third, 8 and 9 points away from the Champions League and the title respectively. A second-to-last-game away win over Barcelona was decisive in Athletic Bilbao winning the championship.

In the Copa de la Reina Atlético made it to the final for the first time after overcoming Valencia in the extra time. There they again defeated Barcelona and won their first title as Atlético's official women's section.

  First season with aps. since S signing / P promotion   Last season with aps. before T transferring out / R retirement   Both

Goalkeepers Aps Gls Defenders Aps Gls Midfielders Aps Gls Forwards Aps Gls
Spain Lola Gallardo 22 0 Spain Mapi León 28 1 Spain Amanda Sampedro 30 10 Spain Sonia Bermúdez S 29 20
Spain Noelia Gil T 9 0 Mexico Kenti Robles S 23 0 Spain Ángela Sosa 26 4 Spain Esther González 29 18
Spain Noelia Tudela T 21 2 Spain Nagore Calderón T 25 5 Spain Débora García T 22 0
Spain Bea Beltrán 20 0 Spain Silvia Meseguer 22 2 Spain Priscila Borja 21 11
Spain Vanesa García R 18 0 Argentina Mariela Coronel S T 19 0 Spain Kuki Rodríguez T 16 5
Spain Marta Carro T 17 2 Spain Ainoa Campo P 7 0
Spain Rocío Gálvez 17 1 Spain Yolanda Albalat P 1 0
Spain Marta Cazalla P 6 0
Portugal Rita Fontemanha S T 6 0
Spain María Bores P 4 0
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Athletic Bilbao 30 25 3 2 75 15 +60 78 Qualification for Copa de la Reina and next season's Champions League
2 Barcelona 30 24 5 1 98 12 +86 77
3 Atlético Madrid 30 22 3 5 83 24 +59 69 Qualification for Copa de la Reina
4 Levante 30 16 6 8 56 38 +18 54
5 Real Sociedad 30 16 5 9 50 33 +17 53

2016–17

Atlético won its first championship as the club's official women's section, remaining undefeated through the entire league campaign. On December 11 it defeated title contender FC Barcelona in its first match in the club's soon to be demolished main venue, the Vicente Calderón Stadium, before an attendance of 13,395[1] and in May it earned a tie in FCB's Mini Estadi to win the title with a last-game victory over Real Sociedad. Along with it, the team qualified for the 2017–18 Champions League for the second time. The next day it was payed a standing guard honor by Atlético's men's team in the Vicente Calderón last-game celebrations.[2] Sonia Bermúdez was the championship's second top scorer with 32 goals in 30 appearances, next to Barcelona's Jennifer Hermoso.

In the Copa de la Reina, where Atlético was the defending champion, the team again reached the final but it was defeated 4–1 by Barcelona in its only loss in the season.

  First season with aps. since S signing / P promotion   Last season with aps. before T transferring out / R retirement   Both

Goalkeepers Aps Gls Defenders Aps Gls Midfielders Aps Gls Forwards Aps Gls
Spain Lola Gallardo 25 0 Spain Mapi León 27 3 Spain Amanda Sampedro 30 8 Spain Sonia Bermúdez 30 32
Romania Andreea Părăluță S 6 0 Spain Andrea Pereira S 27 0 Spain Silvia Meseguer 30 1 Spain Esther González 30 15
Spain Ale López S 25 2 Spain Ángela Sosa 26 0 Spain Priscila Borja T 28 9
Mexico Kenti Robles 24 0 Spain Andrea Falcón S 20 4 Spain Marta Corredera S 22 7
Spain Carmen Menayo S 21 1 Spain Pili García S T 10 0 Equatorial Guinea Genoveva Añonma S T 6 3
Spain Marta Cazalla 19 0 Spain Ainoa Campo 1 0 Spain Laura Fernández P 3 2
Spain Bea Beltrán T 15 2 Spain María José Medina P 1 0
Spain María Bores T 4 0
Spain Rocío Gálvez 2 0
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Atlético Madrid 30 24 6 0 91 17 +74 78 Qualification for the UEFA Champions League and Copa de la Reina
2 Barcelona 30 24 3 3 98 13 +85 75
3 Valencia 30 20 8 2 69 11 +58 68 Qualification for the Copa de la Reina
4 Levante 30 18 3 9 53 49 +4 57
5 Athletic Club 30 16 5 9 64 44 +20 53
Source: Futbolme
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) goal difference; 4) number of goals scored

References

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