- Naiste Meistriliiga
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Naiste Meistriliiga Countries Estonia Confederation UEFA Founded 1996 Number of teams 6 Levels on pyramid 1 Relegation to Esiliiga International cup(s) UEFA Champions League Current champions Pärnu JK
(2011)Website Official Site The Naiste Meistriliiga is the highest-level women's football league in Estonia. The league consists of seven teams who each play one another three times per season; the league champion qualifies for a spot in the UEFA Women's Champions League.
Contents
2011 teams
Team Location Ground FC Flora Tallinn Tallinn A. Le Coq Arena I muru Levadia Tallinn Tallinn Maarjamäe kompleksi kunstmuruväljak Nõmme JK Kalju Tallinn Hiiu Stadium Pärnu JK Pärnu Pärnu Raeküla staadion FC Lootos Põlva Põlva Lootospark Tammeka Tartu JK Tartu Tamme Stadium Champions
This section lists all champions since the league's inception:[1]
- 1996/97: Central Sport (Pärnu)
- 1997/98: TKSK Arsenal (Tallinn)
- 1998: TKSK Arsenal (Tallinn)
- 1999: TKSK (Tallinn)
- 2000: TKSK (Tallinn)
- 2001: TKSK Visa (Tallinn)
- 2002: TKSK Visa (Tallinn)
- 2003: Pärnu JK
- 2004: Pärnu JK
- 2005: Pärnu JK
- 2006: Pärnu JK
- 2007: Levadia Tallinn
- 2008: Levadia Tallinn
- 2009: Levadia Tallinn
- 2010: Pärnu JK
- 2011: Pärnu JK
TKSK Arsenal, TKSK, TKSK Visa, and Levadia Tallinn are all names held at different times by a single club.[2]
Record Champions
Titles Team 9 Levadia Tallinn (6 titles as TKSK Visa/TKSK Arsenal) 6 Pärnu JK 1 Central Sport Pärnu References
- ^ "Estonia - List of Women Champions". RSSSF. http://www.rsssf.com/tablese/est-womchamp.html. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
- ^ http://fclevadia.ee/article/94
External links
Football in Estonia Estonian Football Association National teams Leagues Men: Meistriliiga · Esiliiga · II Liiga · III Liiga · IV Liiga (League system)
Women: Naiste Meistriliiga
Beach soccer: Rannajalgpalli Meistriliiga
Futsal: Saalijalgpalli MeistriliigaDomestic cups Awards Footballer of the Year · Estonian SilverballLists Top level women's football leagues of Europe (UEFA) National Leagues Albania · Austria · Belarus · Belgium · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · Denmark · England · Estonia · Faroe Islands · Finland · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Israel · Italy · Kazakhstan · Latvia · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Macedonia · Malta · Moldova · Netherlands · Northern Ireland · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Republic of Ireland · Romania · Russia · Scotland · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · WalesNo national league Armenia · Andorra · Azerbaijan (defunct) · Liechtenstein · Montenegro · San MarinoFormer leagues This article about an Estonian association football competition is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.