From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
2007 UEFA Women's Cup final
Football match
Football match
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 2007 UEFA Women's Cup Final |
| event | 2006–07 UEFA Women's Cup |
| team1 | Umeå |
| team1association | SWE |
| team1score | 0 |
| team2 | Arsenal |
| team2association | ENG |
| team2score | 1 |
| firstleg | First leg |
| team1score1 | 0 |
| team2score1 | 1 |
| date1 | |
| stadium1 | Gammliavallen |
| city1 | Umeå |
| referee1 | Christine Beck (Germany) |
| attendance1 | 6,265 |
| secondleg | Second leg |
| team1score2 | 0 |
| team2score2 | 0 |
| date2 | |
| stadium2 | Meadow Park |
| city2 | Borehamwood |
| referee2 | Nicole Petignat (Switzerland) |
| attendance2 | 3,467 |
| previous | 2006 |
| next | 2008 |
The 2007 UEFA Women's Cup Final was played on 21 and 29 April 2007 between Arsenal of England and Umeå of Sweden. It was the first final not to feature German teams since the 2003 final. Arsenal won 1–0 on aggregate.
Arsenal were chasing an unprecedented quadruple of titles having already secured the Women's Premier League, Women's FA Cup and Women's Premier League Cup. They were the first English team to reach the UEFA Women's Cup Final and to date the only English winner of the competition. Chelsea W.F.C reached the 2021 final but ultimately lost to Barcelona Feminine making them only the second English side to reach the final.
Arsenal W.F.C went on to reach four more semi-finals, in 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2023, but did not reach the final until 2025, when they defeated Barcelona 1-0 to reclaim the trophy. Umeå would go on to reach back to back finals but would ultimately lose to Frankfurt Frauen by a score of 4-3 over two legs. That would end up being the Swedish side's last final in the competition as of 2025.
Match details
First leg
| {{Football kit | pattern_b =_umea0607h | pattern_sh =_umea0607h | leftarm=000000 | body=000000 | rightarm=000000 | shorts=000000 | socks=000000 | title=Umeå | {{Football kit | pattern_la=_redborder | pattern_b=_arsenal0608h | pattern_ra=_redborder | pattern_so=_redtop | leftarm= FFFFFF | body= EE0000 | rightarm= FFFFFF | shorts= FFFFFF | socks= FFFFFF | title=Arsenal |
|---|
| SWE Andrée Jeglertz |
|---|
| ENG Vic Akers |
|---|
|}
Second leg
| {{Football kit | pattern_la=_redborder | pattern_b=_arsenal0608h | pattern_ra=_redborder | pattern_so=_redtop | leftarm= FFFFFF | body= EE0000 | rightarm= FFFFFF | shorts= FFFFFF | socks= FFFFFF | title=Arsenal | {{Football kit | pattern_b =_umea0607h | pattern_sh =_umea0607h | leftarm=000000 | body=000000 | rightarm=000000 | shorts=000000 | socks=000000 | title=Umeå |
|---|
| ENG Vic Akers |
|---|
| SWE Andrée Jeglertz |
|---|
|}
References
References
- (29 April 2007). "Arsenal 0-0 Umea (agg 1-0)".
- "When Arsenal won the Champions League final: The quadruple icons who matched Invincibles era | Goal.com".
- "The forgotten pioneers of women's football". BBC Sport.
- (5 December 2021). "Sam Kerr and Fran Kirby torment Arsenal as dominant Chelsea seal domestic treble with Women's FA Cup". The Telegraph.
- (25 October 2020). "Spirited Arsenal outgun rivals | UEFA Women's Champions League".
- (4 May 2008). "Anna Kessel on Arsenal, the No 1 ladies football team".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 2007 UEFA Women's Cup final — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report