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The 2023–24 Scottish Cup was the 51st official edition (53rd overall) of the national cup competition in Scottish women's football. For sponsorship reasons, this is edition was officially known as the Scottish Gas Women's Scottish Cup .
The Women's Scottish Cup is the national knockout cup competition for women's football in Scotland. [1] First held in 1970–71, the competition is owned and managed by Scottish Women's Football (SWF), an affiliated body of the Scottish Football Association (SFA). The Women's Scottish Cup is open to all senior teams affiliated with The Scottish FA.
They had already won the 2022–23 Scottish Women's Premier League Cup (for the first time) earlier in the season. With both teams having suffered the disappointment of missing out on the 2022–23 Scottish Women's Premier League title on the last matchday a week earlier, they were considered evenly matched going into the final.
An action-packed Sunday afternoon decided the Scottish Cup quarter-finalists for 2024. Both sides have racked up their fair share of Scottish Cup experience and have faced off in six of the nine ...
The last time the pair faced off was a six-goal thriller with Thistle coming out 4-2 winners. If you didn't know, Fiona Brown is officially back at Glasgow City after her contract ended at FC ...
Women's association football in Scotland has an organised history including the first international women's match in 1881, [1] [2] the president of the British Ladies' Football Club in 1895, Lady Florence Dixie, [2] [3] the Edinburgh–Preston "World Championship" in 1937 [4] and 1939, [5] [6] and the Scottish Women's Cup founded in 1970.
The 2021–22 SWF Scottish Cup, known as the Biffa Scottish Women's Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 49th official edition (51st overall) of the national cup competition in Scottish women's football. The competition was compulsory for all SWPL and championship teams in full membership of Scottish Women's Football. [1]
Scotland hosted the first organised games of women's football in 1881, [1] and the sport became popular in the 1920s, attracting crowds of thousands. Women's football was banned from English Football Association grounds in 1921; the Scottish Football Association (SFA) did not follow suit, although it was not supportive.