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Below the Premier division, the First Division (SWFL 1) and Second Division (SWFL 2) existed from 1999 until 2019. The Third Division was the national fourth-tier league founded by the SWFL in 1999. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] The most prominent member of the Third Division in 1999–2000 was Third Lanark, a women's team formed 22 years after the disbandment ...
The SWFL Cup is played at present as the league cup of level 5 clubs in the SWFL, now a standalone amateur league tier. Teams at levels 1 and 2 now play for the SWPL Cup and levels 3 and 4 play for the SWF Championship and League One Cup, following a reorganisation of the system in 2019. [2] [3]
For most of its history, the First Division was a national league whose top teams won promotion to the Scottish Women's Premier League (SWPL), while the lowest were relegated to the Second Division (SWFL 2). Those divisions operated on the traditional autumn–spring football season calendar until 2009, when they switched to a March–November ...
The 2016 Scottish Women's Football League First Division, commonly known as SWFL 1, is the first season of the Scottish Women's Football League First Division, the third tier of women's football in Scotland since its reconstruction at the end of the 2015 season.
[3] League One is the fourth tier of the women's football pyramid and is a single national division. Earlier, the level 4 tier was the SWFL Third Division (1999–2008), SWFL Second Division (2016–2019), and the SWFL (2020–2021), which is now level 5. The Championship's first winners were Montrose (North) and Gartcairn (South).
Its top teams won promotion to the SWFL First Division. The Second Division began as a single national division, [1] [2] but became three regional divisions in 2008–09, the North, East and West. It was further enlarged in 2012 to four divisions. From 2016 to 2019, SWFL 2 had forty clubs in four regional divisions.
The 2022–23 Scottish Women's Football Championship was the second completed season of the SWF Championship as the third-tier division of women's football in Scotland.Due to league restructuring by Scottish Women's Football (SWF) after the 2021–22 season, a national eight-club Championship division was formed and, one level below, a new fourth tier, Scottish Women's Football League One ...
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).