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・ UEFA Women's Euro 1995 qualification
・ UEFA Women's Euro 1995 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 1997
・ UEFA Women's Euro 1997 qualification
・ UEFA Women's Euro 1997 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2001
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2001 qualification
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2001 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2005
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2005 qualification
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2005 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2009
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2009 qualifying
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2009 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013
UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Final
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Group A
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Group B
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Group C
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 knockout stage
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 1
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 2
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 3
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 4
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 5
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 6
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 qualifying – Group 7
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 squads
・ UEFA Women's Euro 2013 statistics


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UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Final : ウィキペディア英語版
UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Final

The UEFA Women's Euro 2013 Final was an association football match on 28 July 2013 at the Friends Arena in Solna, Sweden, to determine the winner of UEFA Women's Euro 2013. The match was won by the defending champions Germany, who earned their sixth consecutive European title – and eighth in total – with a 1–0 win over Norway.
The match took place in front of a record crowd for a Women's European Championship fixture as 41,301 spectators saw Anja Mittag score the only goal of the game in the 49th minute. Norway were awarded two penalties during the match but both were saved by German goalkeeper Nadine Angerer.〔
==Background==
Germany had previously won the competition a record seven times (including one title as West Germany) and had won six of the seven tournaments staged under its current title and status (in 1991, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2005 and 2009). Three of their seven titles had come after defeating Norway in the final. Despite losing three finals, Norway had twice previously managed to win the competition: in 1987 under its original title of the ''UEFA European Competition for Representative Women's Teams'', and in 1993; the only time since the competition was given European Championship status by UEFA that Germany did not win the competition. With this unparalleled record in European women's football, Germany had begun the tournament as the number one ranked team, with Norway ranked fifth in UEFA's coefficient ranking before the competition.
The two teams had already met during the finals just eleven days earlier. In their final game of the group stage, Norway became the first team to defeat Germany in any form of UEFA Women's Euros fixture since they lost a qualifying match in May 1996, again against the Norwegians.〔 Prior to the final, the two sides had previously met each other a total of 36 times, with Germany winning 17 and Norway 14.〔 The 2013 Final was the fourth time that the two teams had met in the competition's final.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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