Gintra Universitetas
Gintra Universitetas is a Lithuanian women's football club from Šiauliai. It is the team of the local Šiauliai University.
Ground | Šiaulių savivaldybės stadionas | |||
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Capacity | 4000 | |||
Chairman | ![]() | |||
Manager | ![]() | |||
League | A Lyga | |||
2020 | 1st | |||
Website | Club website | |||
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History
The club plays in the highest Lithuanian league, the A Lyga and has won 13 championships so far. The fourth one in 2005 and every championship since then.[1]
After its championships, the club played in the UEFA Women's Cup and from 2009 onwards in the UEFA Women's Champions League. The club participated only in the qualifying rounds though, playing 3 games each season, and the best result achieved was 1 win, 1 tie and 1 loss thus failing to move on to the next round.
The club took part in the 2010–11 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round and managed a good 2nd place after beating ZFK Borec (Macedonia), drawing to Klaksvikar Itrottarfelag (Faroe Islands) and only losing to England's Everton. All games were hosted by Gintra in Lithuania. In the 2014/15 edition they finished as best runners-up and advanced to the round of 32 for the first time in ten seasons.
Honours
- A Lyga (19): 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005 to 2020[2]
- Lithuanian Women's Cup (12) : 2005 to 2016
- Lithuanian Women's Supercup (1) : 2006
- Baltic League (1): 2017
Players
Current squad
- As of 11 May 2020.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Former internationals
Lithuania: Raimonda Bložytė-Lukoševičienė, Viktorija Budrytė, Gintare Burokaitė, Oksana Imanalijeva, Rasa Imanalijeva, Rasa Jackunaitė, Gitana Kerpiėnė, Indrė Kirjanovaitė, Raimonda Kudytė, Rimantė Kunickaitė, Anika Kyžaitė, Justina Lavrenovaitė-Perez, Greta Lukjančukė Jurgita Mačikunytė, Rita Mažukėlytė, Brigita Partikaitė, Alina Petrauskaitė, Klaudija Savickaitė, Marija Stasiulytė, Olga Švaikevič, Kamilė Vaičiulaitytė, Liucija Vaitukaitytė, Simona Veličkaitė, Tatjana Veržbickaja
Azerbaijan: Ina Boyko,[note 1] Narmina Rzayeva
Belarus: Lyubov Gudchenko, Anna Pilipenko
Bulgaria: Kristina Petrunova
Chile: María José Rojas
Equatorial Guinea: Laetitia Chapeh, Gloria Chinasa
Jamaica: Toriana Patterson
Latvia: Guna Āboliņa, Sintija Greijere, Olga Ivanova, Ņina Maksimova
Mexico: Christina Murillo
Moldova: Ina Budestean, Carolina Țabur, Elena Turcan
Namibia: Zenatha Coleman
Nigeria: Florence Ajayi
Serbia: Jelena Čubrilo
South Africa: Jermaine Seoposenwe, Leandra Smeda, Nothando Vilakazi
Thailand: Miranda Nild
Ukraine: Anastasia Filenko, Tetyana Kozyrenko
Record in UEFA competitions
Notes
- Ina Boyko and Ina Budestean are the same person
References
- "Gintra win tenth consecutive title" (in Lithuanian). delfi.lt. 26 September 2014. Retrieved 27 September 2014.
- "„Gintra-Universitetas" užsitikrino čempionių titulą". Lithuanian Football Federation. 25 October 2017.