Ligat Nashim (Hebrew: ליגת נשים, lit. Women's League) is the Israeli women's football league. It has been run by the Israel Football Association since 1998.

Ligat Nashim
Founded1998
Country Israel
ConfederationUEFA
Number of clubs8
Level on pyramid1
Domestic cup(s)Israeli Women's Cup
International cup(s)UEFA Champions League
Current championsF.C. Kiryat Gat (5th title)
(2022–23)
Most championshipsASA Tel Aviv University (8 titles)
WebsiteOfficial
Current: 2024–25

Format

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The league is divided into two divisions, with the top division, titled Women's Premier League (previously Ligat Nashim Rishona, lit. "First Women's League"), comprising 9 teams, and the second division, titled Women's Leumit League (previously Ligat Nashim Shniya, lit. "Second Women's League"), comprising a variable number of teams, depending on registration. In 2015, a third division was created, named Mama-Foot League (meaning: a football league for mothers) at first,[1] and changed to Women's Artzit League in 2016. The third division is contested in smaller pitches, over two-halves of 15 minutes each and with unlimited substitutions and the winner does not promote to the second division.[2][3]

Between 2007–08 and 2010–11 the league was made of one division of 12 teams in a round-robin tournament with the top club winning the championship, with a deciding play-off match to decide the winner if the two teams were tied, as was the case in 2009–10. In 2010–11 the IFA re-introduced a second division that previously existed in 2006–07.[4]

Since 2011, the participating clubs first play a conventional round-robin schedule, followed by a championship playoff contested by the four top teams, where they meet each other twice. Upon its conclusion, the first place team wins the Israeli championship and qualifies to participate in the UEFA Women's Champions League. The bottom teams play each other once to avoid relegation, with the bottom club dropping to the second division. The second division is played as a double round-robin schedule, each team playing its opponents four times, with the top club promoting to the top division.[5]

Champions

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A women's football league was organized in late 1998 and started playing during October 1998.[6] In 2003–04 the league was abandoned in mid-season and was never completed.[7][8]

Season First Division Second Division Third Division
1998–99 Maccabi Haifa
1999–2000 ASA Tel Aviv University
2000–01 Hapoel Tel Aviv
2001–02 Maccabi Haifa
2002–03 Maccabi Holon
2003–04 League abandoned
2004–05 Maccabi Holon
2005–06
2006–07 Ironi Bat Yam
2007–08
2008–09
2009–10 ASA Tel Aviv University
2010–11 Hapoel Be'er Sheva
2011–12[9] F.C. Ramat HaSharon
2012–13 F.C. Kiryat Gat
2013–14 Maccabi Tzur Shalom Bialik
2014–15 Maccabi Be'er Sheva Bnot Meitav Tel Aviv
2015–16 F.C. Ramat HaSharon Bnot Netanya F.C.
2016–17 F.C. Kiryat Gat Hapoel Ra'anana Bnot Ironi Modi'in
2017–18 Hapoel Be'er Sheva Maccabi Bnot Or Avika
2018–19[10] ASA Tel Aviv University Maccabi Bnot Emek Hefer Hapoel Bnot Arabe
2019–20 F.C. Ramat HaSharon Hapoel Be'er Sheva ASA Tel Aviv University B
2020–21 F.C. Kiryat Gat Hapoel Marmorek Hapoel Tel Aviv
2021–22 Hapoel Ironi Petah Tikva Hapoel Kiryat Yam
2022–23 Hapoel Ra'anana Or Yehuda
2023–24 Hapoel Tel Aviv Maccabi Atlit

Total championships

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Club Titles
ASA Tel Aviv 8
Maccabi Holon 6
Kiryat Gat 6
Maccabi Haifa 2
Ramat HaSharon
Hapoel Tel Aviv 1

References

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  1. ^ Women's Football Launched the Mama-Foot League IFA, 27 January 2015 (in Hebrew)
  2. ^ Liga Artzit Nashim IFA (in Hebrew)
  3. ^ Oho Mama: Ironi Modi'in Went Top of the Women's Amateur League Dorit Siton, 14 March 2016, Modiinet (in Hebrew)
  4. ^ The FA: The Police Will Return Partially to the Stadiums Dana Bahat, 27 October 2010, One (in Hebrew)
  5. ^ Championship Regulations IFA, pp. 74-81 (in Hebrew)
  6. ^ Women's Football History Avraham Kochen, Women's Football in Israel (via Internet Archive) (in Hebrew)
  7. ^ Iche Menache At the End of Ligat Nashim: It's a Year We'd Rather Forget Lior Weitz, 1 June 2014, walla.co.il (in Hebrew)
  8. ^ Women: If There's No League, At Least There's the Cup Lior Weitz, 17 May 2004, walla.co.il (in Hebrew)
  9. ^ "ASA Tel Aviv won the League of Women" (in Hebrew). football.org.il. 17 April 2012. Archived from the original on 2 November 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  10. ^ Nof, Lee (5 May 2019). "אס"א ת"א זכתה באליפות המדינה בכדורגל נשים" [ASA TA won the State Championship in Women's Football]. One (in Hebrew). Retrieved 23 November 2021.
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