Scottish Women's Football League
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Scottish Women's Football League (SWFL) is a group of women's football divisions in
Scotland Scotland (, ) is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. Covering the northern third of the island of Great Britain, mainland Scotland has a border with England to the southeast and is otherwise surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean to the ...
. The league is owned and managed by
Scottish Women's Football Scottish Women's Football (SWF), formerly known as the Scottish Women’s Football Association (SWFA) between 1972 and 2001, is the governing body for women's association football in Scotland. It is an affiliated national association of the Scotti ...
(SWF), an affiliated body of the
Scottish Football Association The Scottish Football Association (also known as the SFA and the Scottish FA; sco, Scots Fitba Association; Scottish Gaelic: ''Comann Ball-coise na h-Alba'') is the Sport governing body, governing body of association football, football in Scot ...
(SFA). The league currently has 35 clubs in three regional divisions. Following on from the national league of the
Scottish Women's Football Association Scottish Women's Football (SWF), formerly known as the Scottish Women’s Football Association (SWFA) between 1972 and 2001, is the governing body for women's association football in Scotland. It is an affiliated national association of the Scotti ...
founded in 1972, the SWFL was formed by clubs and the SWFA in 1999 as the country's top four women's league tiers. The SWFL now comprises the fourth tier of the Scottish league system, following the breakaway of its Premier Division to create the
Scottish Women's Premier League The Scottish Women's Premier League (SWPL) is the highest level of league competition in women's football in Scotland. Its two divisions are SWPL 1 and SWPL 2. The league was formed when the Premier Division of the Scottish Women's Football League ...
(SWPL) in 2002, and the subsequent addition of SWPL 2 and the SWF Championship. From 1999 until 2015, the SWFL First Division (SWFL 1) was the second tier of Scottish women's football.


History

The modern Scottish women's leagues began in 1972–73, when
Westthorn United Westthorn United Ladies Football Club was an early women's football team in Scotland. The team was founded in 1967 by women working at Gay's biscuit factory in Glasgow. It was initially known as the Glasgow Gay Ladies, or Glasgow Gay Eleven. It s ...
won the national title. League systems in the 1990s included a tiered divisional system, or feeder leagues in the North, East and West of Scotland, as well as an Inter-Region Cup. The top division was known from 1997 to 1999 as the Sports Connection Premier for sponsorship reasons, in the ''Sports Connection Women's Scottish League''. The Scottish Women's Football League was formed on 6 November 1999, with the top four national divisions: the Premier Division, First, Second and Third Division. The League had 46 clubs in 2000. The SWFL Premier Division constituted the top division in Scottish women's football from 1999–2000 until 2001–02. Three clubs became national champions in those seasons: Cumbernauld, Ayr United, and F.C. Kilmarnock. The women's
Ayrshire derby The Ayrshire Derby refers to matches between the two professional Scottish football sides based in Ayrshire: Ayr United and Kilmarnock. The first match was held on 14 September 1910, in the same year that Ayr United were formed. This game was th ...
, Ayr–Kilmarnock, was a key match in the national title race in each season in the early 2000s. Ayr United were Scotland's first representative in the UEFA Women's Cup in 2001–02, as a group host at
Somerset Park Somerset Park is a football stadium located in Ayr, South Ayrshire, Scotland. It has been the home of Ayr United since they were founded in 1910. Prior to that, it was the home ground of Ayr, who merged with Ayr Parkhouse to form Ayr United. H ...
. Kilmarnock played in the 2002–03 tournament in Austria. Below the Premier division, the First Division (SWFL 1) and Second Division (SWFL 2) existed from 1999 until 2019. The Third Division was the national fourth-tier league founded by the SWFL in 1999. The most prominent member of the Third Division in 1999–2000 was Third Lanark, a women's team formed 22 years after the disbandment of the
Third Lanark A.C. Third Lanark Athletic Club was a Scottish football club based in Glasgow. Founded in 1872 as an offshoot of the 3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers, the club was a founder member of the Scottish Football Association (SFA) in 1872 and the Scottish ...
men's team and playing its games at
Cathkin Park Cathkin Park is a municipal park in Glasgow, Scotland. The park is maintained by the city's parks department, and it is a public place where football is still played. The park contains the site of the second Hampden Park, previously home to the ...
. Falkirk Ladies won promotion from the Third Division in 1999–2000; later seasons' champions were Baillieston (2000–01), and F.C. Kilmarnock Girls (2002–03). The division was separated into two groups, the West and East, each with eight clubs in 2004–05, and seven and eight respectively in 2006–07. They became the Third Division North and South, each with nine clubs, in 2007–08. This league tier was disbanded by 2010. In 2002, the SWFL's twelve-team top division broke away to form the SWPL, leaving the remaining thirty clubs in the SWFL. In 2016, the SWPL expanded to two divisions, meaning the SWFL was now at the third and fourth tiers of the league structure. In the reorganisation in 2016, the national SWFL First Division (SWFL 1) split into two regionalised leagues (North and South), above the Second Division (SWFL 2) with four regionalised leagues. The SWF Championship was created in 2020 as the new third tier of the 'Performance' category of the Scottish game. The Championship retained the existing North–South divisions but replaced the SWFL First Division, which was officially discontinued, as was the Second Division. The new fourth tier, named the SWFL, operates regional divisions in a separate 'Recreational' category, with no automatic promotion or relegation for its clubs.


Cup competitions

The League Cup, originating from the 1970s, was latterly known as the
Scottish Women's Football League First Division Cup The Scottish Women's Football League Cup, previously known as the Scottish Women's League Cup and Scottish Women's Football League First Division Cup, is a Scottish women's football competition founded in 1972. It is open only to teams in the Sc ...
from 2012 when an additional Second Division Cup was introduced. Following the 2019 reorganisation, this reverted to a single SWFL League Cup competition, with a 'Plate' for clubs eliminated in the opening round. SWFL teams also compete in the primary national cup competition, the
Scottish Women's Cup The Scottish Women's Cup is the national knockout cup competition for women's football in Scotland. First held in 1970–71, the competition is owned and managed by Scottish Women's Football (SWF), an affiliated body of the Scottish Football Assoc ...
.


2022 clubs

The following teams are playing in the SWFL in the 2022 season. As well as first teams, the SWFL divisions also incorporate a number of development or youth teams of other Scottish League clubs.


North/East

* Alloa Athletic * Bayside Women * Buchan Ladies United * Dryburgh Athletic * Dunfermline Athletic * East Fife Development * Forfar Farmington * McDermid Ladies * Stonehaven * Westdyke Ladies Thistle


West/South West

* Annan Athletic * Ayr United Development * Clark Drive * Cumnock Juniors * Dalbeattie Star * Drumchapel United * Harmony Row *
Kilwinning Kilwinning (, sco, Kilwinnin; gd, Cill D’Fhinnein) is a town in North Ayrshire, Scotland. It is on the River Garnock, north of Irvine, about southwest of Glasgow. It is known as "The Crossroads of Ayrshire". Kilwinning was also a Civil Pa ...
* Nithsdale Wanderers * Queen of the South * Stewarton United


Central/South East

* Bonnyrigg Rose * Central Girls * Clydebank * Dunipace * Edinburgh South * Falkirk Development * Linlithgow Rose * Livingston Development * Lothian * Motherwell Development * Murieston United * Musselburgh Windsor * Rutherglen * West Park United


Seasons

Champions and runners-up of the SWFL Premier Division, 1999–2002: For seasons and champions in the other divisions from 1999 to 2019, see SWFL First Division (SWFL 1) and SWFL Second Division (SWFL 2). The following clubs are the winners of the SWFL regional divisions since 2020:


See also

* Highlands and Islands League


References

{{Women's football in Scotland Women's football leagues in Scotland Amateur association football Sports leagues established in 1999 1999 establishments in Scotland