Germany women’s national football team

The Germany women’s national football team is governed by the German Football Association. They are two-time world champions, having won the 2003 and 2007 tournaments. The team has won eight of the twelve UEFA European Championships, claiming six consecutive titles between 1995 and 2013. Germany has won Olympic gold in 2016, after three consecutive bronze medals at the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament. As of March 2020, Germany is ranked 2nd in the FIFA Women’s World Rankings.

About Germany women’s national football team in brief

Summary Germany women's national football teamThe Germany women’s national football team is governed by the German Football Association. The German national team is one of the most successful in women’s football. They are two-time world champions, having won the 2003 and 2007 tournaments. The team has won eight of the twelve UEFA European Championships, claiming six consecutive titles between 1995 and 2013. Germany has won Olympic gold in 2016, after three consecutive bronze medals at the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament, finishing third in 2000, 2004 and 2008. Birgit Prinz holds the record for most appearances and is the team’s all-time leading goalscorer. Prinz has also set international records; she has received the FIFA World Player of the Year award three times. Women’s football was long met with skepticism in Germany, and official matches were banned by the DFB until 1970. As of March 2020, Germany is ranked 2nd in the FIFA Women’s World Rankings. The unified German team successfully defended their title at the 1991 European Championship winning all games in the qualifying group. After the German reunification, the East German football association joined the D FBF. The East German women’s team had played only one official international match, losing 0–3 to Czechoslovakia in a friendly match on May 9, 1990. The DFB long remained uninvolved in women’s football. Other football associations had already formed official women�’s national teams in the 1970s, but the DBBF saw a need and established the women”s national team in 1982.

In 1981, DFB official Horst R. Schmidt was invited to send a team to the unofficial women’s world championship. To avoid humiliation, the German club champions Bergisch Gladbach 09, who went on to win the tournament, were sent to the tournament. The first international match took place on 10 November 1982 in Koblenz. Doris Kresimon scored the first international goal in the 25th minute, In the second half, 18-year-old Silvia Neid contributed two goals to the 5–1 victory; Neid later became the assistant coach in 1996 and the head coach in 2005. Undefeated and without conceding a goal, the team qualified for the European Championship for the first time in 1989; the tournament was played on home soil in West Germany. On 2 July 1989 in July 1989, West Germany played Norway in the final and won 4–1 with goals from Ursula Lohn, Heidi Mohrmann and Angelika Fehrmann. The semi-final against Italy was the firstInternational women’sFootball match shown live on German television. The game was decided by a penalty shootout, in which Marion Isbert scored the winning penalty kicks and saved three saves from Norway goalkeeper Osabrück. The match was played in front of a crowd of 22,000, before they beat Norway 3–1. In the final, they beat Italy 3–3, winning all three games in qualifying group games in this time.