Results

Campionatul European - Feminin - Calificari 04/09 13:00 2 [2] Macedonia de Nord - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin [1] W 0-5
Campionatul European - Feminin - Calificari 04/05 14:30 1 Slovenia - Feminin v Moldova - Feminin W 2-0
International - Feminin 02/27 18:30 50 Filipine - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin W 0-1
International - Feminin 02/24 18:30 2 Slovenia - Feminin v Finlanda - Feminin L 0-1
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 12/05 18:00 6 [1] Republica Ceha - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin [3] L 4-0
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 12/01 17:00 5 [3] Slovenia - Feminin v Bosnia-Hertegovina - Feminin [1] W 2-1
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 10/31 16:30 4 [3] Slovenia - Feminin v Belarus - Feminin [4] D 0-0
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 10/27 18:00 3 Belarus - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin D 1-1
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 09/26 14:00 2 Bosnia-Hertegovina - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin D 1-1
Liga Natiunilor UEFA - Feminin 09/22 14:00 1 Slovenia - Feminin v Republica Ceha - Feminin L 0-2
International - Feminin 07/14 17:00 - Slovenia - Feminin v Serbia - Feminin L 0-3
International - Feminin 04/11 18:00 - Belgia - Feminin v Slovenia - Feminin D 2-2

Statistici

 TotalGazdeOaspeti
Matches played 11 6 5
Wins 4 2 2
Draws 3 1 2
Losses 4 3 1
Goals for 12 4 8
Goals against 13 7 6
Clean sheets 4 2 2
Failed to score 5 4 1

The Slovenia women's national football team (Slovene: Slovenska ženska nogometna reprezentanca) represents Slovenia in international women's football and is controlled by the Football Association of Slovenia, the governing body for football in Slovenia. The team played its first official match in 1993, two years after the country gained independence from Yugoslavia. Before that, Slovenian players played for the Yugoslavia national team.

History

Slovenia made its official debut on 25 September 1993 against England in the qualifying for the 1995 European Championship. They lost all six qualifiers with a 0–60 goal average, including a record 17–0 loss against Spain. After this Slovenia did not take part in official competitions for more than a decade.

They returned in 2005 for the 2007 World Cup qualification, where they did not have options to qualify since back then a two-division format with promotions and relegations was held and they started in the lower category. For the 2009 European Championship the two divisions were merged into one, and Slovenia made it to the play-offs as one of the four best 3rd-ranked teams, their biggest success to date. There they were knocked out by Ukraine by a 0–5 aggregate.

In the 2011 World Cup and 2013 European Championship qualifiers Slovenia ended fourth out of five teams, with 6 and 4 points, respectively.