Espanyol Femení
Full nameReial Club Deportiu Espanyol de Barcelona SAD Femenino
Nickname(s)Periquitos, españolistas
Founded1970 (1970)
GroundCiutat Esportiva Dani Jarque
Capacity1,520
PresidentJoan Collet i Diví
Head coachJordi Ferrón
LeaguePrimera Federación
2021–22Segunda División, 2nd
WebsiteClub website

RCD Espanyol Femení (Real Club Deportivo Español) is the women's football section of RCD Espanyol and was founded in 1970.

History

RCD Espanyol was one of the pioneering teams in women's football in Spain, playing its first match as early as 1970.[1] The team's first national success came in 1989, when they first reached the national cup's final, losing it against Añorga. They won the competition for the first time in 1996, and successfully defended the title the following year.

2006 was their most successful season to date as they won their first (and for now only) league title and their third Queen's Cup. Thus Espanyol took part in the UEFA Women's Cup the following season.

Espanyol players celebrating the 2010 Copa de la Reina title.

In the late 2000s to the early 2010s, Espanyol consolidated itself as one of Spain's top teams. It has been most successful in the Copa de la Reina, winning three titles in 2009, 2010, and 2012, tying with Levante UD as the competition's most successful team.[2] In the late 2010s, they consistently finished in the middle/bottom half of the league table and flirted with relegation multiple times.

Espanyol had its worst-ever finish in the league when they ended the 2019–20 season in 16th place, winning none of their 21 matches and losing 16. They avoided relegation to the Reto Iberdrola when the RFEF decided that there would be no relegations for the season due to suspension of the league brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] The 2020–21 season marked Espanyol's 50th year of existence for their women's team.[4] That season, Espanyol were relegated to the Reto Iberdrola for the first time in their history, finishing 16th out of 18 in the league table.[5] They failed to be promoted back immediately on the final matchday of the 2021–22 season, losing 3–0 to fellow Catalan club Levante Las Planas, who took the title instead.[6]

Competition record

Season to season

SeasonDiv.Pos.Copa de la ReinaChampions League
1988–893rdQuarterfinals
1989–903rdRunner-up
1990–915thRound of 16
1991–923rd
1992–931stRound of 16
1993–945thRound of 16
1994–953rdSemifinalist
1995–963rdChampion
1996–973rdChampion
1997–983rdSemifinalist
1998–993rd
1999–002ndFirst round
2000–012ndQuarterfinals
2001–023rdRunner-up
2002–037thQuarterfinals
2003–048th
2004–053rdQuarterfinals
2005–061stChampion
2006–072ndRunner-upGroup stage
2007–084thQuarterfinals
2008–094thChampion
2009–102ndChampion
2010–112ndRunner-up
2011–123rdChampion
2012–135thQuarterfinals
2013–1411th
2014–157thQuarterfinals
2015–169th
2016–1713th
2017–1814th
2018–199thRound of 16
2019–2016thRound of 16
2020–2116th
2021–222ªP2ndRound of 16

Record in UEFA competitions

SeasonCompetitionStageOpponentResultScorers
2006–07UEFA Women's CupQualifying StageScotland Hibernian LFC
France FCF Juvisy
Faroe Islands
4–1
1–0
7–0
Adriana 2, Cubí, Serna
Rubio
Cubí 4, Adriana 2, Diéguez
Group StageNorway Kolbotn IL
Sweden Umeå IK
Ukraine Lehenda Chernihiv
2–4
0–3
5–0
Adriana + 1 o.g.

Serna 2, Adriana, Cubí, Rubio

Titles

Official

Invitational

Players

Current squad

As of 21 March 2022[7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Spain ESP Montse Quesada
2 DF Spain ESP Irene Corral
3 DF Spain ESP Marta Turmo
4 DF Spain ESP Maite Albarrán
5 DF Spain ESP Xènia Pérez
6 MF Chile CHI Nayadet López
7 MF Spain ESP Cristina Baudet
8 MF Japan JPN Maya Yamamoto
9 MF Ukraine UKR Tamila Khimich
10 FW Argentina ARG Marianela Szymanowski
No. Pos. Nation Player
11 DF Spain ESP Sara Extremera
12 DF Dominican Republic DOM Manuela Lareo
13 GK Finland FIN Paula Myllyoja
16 FW Spain ESP Anaïr Lomba
17 MF Spain ESP Carolina Marín De la Fuente
18 MF Spain ESP Judit Pablos
19 FW Spain ESP Clara de Clemente
21 DF Spain ESP Júlia Guerra
22 DF Colombia COL Daniela Caracas
24 FW Spain ESP Nora Fernández Parra

See also

References

  1. "La historia del RCD Espanyol Femení" [The history of RCD Espanyol Femení] (in Spanish). Sexto Anillo. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  2. Mari Paz dresses herself as queen to give Espanyol its sixth title. Marca
  3. Menayo, David (6 May 2020). "La RFEF da por suspendida la temporada y apuesta por una Primera Iberdrola de 18 equipos". marca.com. MARCA. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  4. "50 years of RCD Espanyol Femení". rcdespanyol.com. RCD Espanyol. 8 March 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  5. ""The objective is to get the team back to the first division"". rcdespanyol.com. RCD Espanyol. 7 June 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  6. El Levante Las Planas Regresa a primera división [Levante Las Planas return to the Primera division], Marca, 29 May 2022 (in Spanish)
  7. "First Team - Team 2021-2022". RCD Espanyol. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
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