List of Paris Saint-Germain Féminine seasons

Paris Saint-Germain Féminine are a French professional football club based in Paris. Founded in 1971, they compete in the Division 1 Féminine, the top division of French football. Since their inception, PSG have played 49 seasons, all of them within the top three levels of the French football league system: Division 1, Division 2 and Ligue de Paris.

PSG's team during the 2014–15 season.

The Parisians began life in the Ligue de Paris in 1971–72, playing regional league football during eight seasons. They were promoted to Division 1 ahead of the 1979–1980 campaign. PSG have played 29 seasons in the top flight; they have been in D1 since 2001–02. Paris have never won the league title, though. They have been relegated to Division 2 three times: first in 1981–82, then in 1991–92 and finally in 1994–95. The capital club have played twelve seasons in the second tier. They returned to the Division 1 in 2001–02 and have never looked back since. The club's worst D1 finish to date is 12th, their placing at the end of the 1994–95 season.

Paris SG experienced their best season to date in 2017–18. The capital club won the Coupe de France and were Division 1 runners-up. Other notable campaigns include 2014–15 and 2016–17, when PSG reached the UEFA Women's Champions League final (2015 and 2017). The 2014–15 season also saw Paris finish second in D1 with 82 points (club record), while in 2016–17 the club played 37 matches and scored 116 goals in all competitions (club records). Finally, Marie-Antoinette Katoto set the club's record for most goals scored in a season by a single player 2018–19 (30 goals).

Background

Paris Saint-Germain were formed in the summer of 1971 following the green light given by the French Football Federation (FFF) to women's football.[1] The club signed 33 women for the 1971–72 season and the newly formed team began life in the Ligue de Paris, the bottom of the French football pyramid.[1][2]

PSG finally joined the elite during the 1979–1980 season, when the Division 1 was expanded from 20 to 48 teams.[1][2] The club would bounce between the top flight and the Division 2 divisions throughout the next 19 years.[2] Paris finally settled in D1 after winning the D2 title in 2001. Since then, they have never been relegated from Division 1.[2] Today, PSG are trying to break the dominance of Olympique Lyonnais over French and European football.[3][4]

Seasons

As of the 2019–20 season.[1][2][5][6][7][8]
Missing data from matches of the Ligue de Paris (1971–1979) and National 1B / Division 2 (1993–94, 1996–97 and 1997–98 seasons).
Winners Runners-up Promoted Relegated
Season League CdF TdC UEFA competitions Pld W D L GF GA GD Top scorer
Division Position Player Goals
1971–72 Ligue de Paris 2nd
1972–73 Ligue de Paris
1973–74 Ligue de Paris
1974–75 Ligue de Paris 4th
1975–76 Ligue de Paris 6th
1976–77 Ligue de Paris 5th
1977–78 Ligue de Paris
1978–79 Ligue de Paris
1979–80 Division 1 Centre, 3rd 14 8 2 4 40 11 +29
1980–81 Division 1 Centre, 3rd 14 7 3 4 22 12 +10
1981–82 Division 1 Centre, 5th 14 4 3 7 17 21 −4
1982–83 Division 2 RU 21 11 5 5 31 11 +20
1983–84 Division 2 Group C, 4th 20 8 3 9 50 27 +23
1984–85 Division 2 RU 23 11 3 9 50 33 +17
1985–86 Division 2 SF 21 9 8 4 43 22 +21
1986–87 Division 1 Group A, 3rd 14 8 1 5 29 22 +7
1987–88 Division 1 Group A, 7th 18 6 1 11 25 37 −12
1988–89 Division 1 Group A, 3rd 18 10 2 6 33 29 +4
1989–90 Division 1 Group B, 7th 18 7 4 7 27 24 +3
1990–91 Division 1 Group B, 5th 18 7 6 5 28 27 +1
1991–92 Division 1 Group B, 5th 18 9 4 5 36 20 +16
1992–93 National 1B Group B, 5th 18 8 3 7 20 19 +1
1993–94 National 1B 3rd
1994–95 National 1A 12th 22 2 2 18 16 77 −61
1995–96 National 1B Group A, 4th 18 9 3 6 34 31 +3
1996–97 National 1B Group A, 7th
1997–98 National 1B Group A, 5th
1998–99 National 1B Group A, 3rd 18 11 2 5 48 20 +28
1999–00 National 1B Group A, 2nd 18 14 1 3 49 13 +36
2000–01 National 1B 1st 20 18 0 2 83 11 +72
2001–02 National 1A 5th QF 25 13 6 6 45 32 +13 Ingrid Boyeldieu 17
2002–03 Division 1 7th R16 24 7 8 9 40 57 −17 Ingrid Boyeldieu 13
2003–04 Division 1 8th QF 25 7 8 10 27 37 −10 Ingrid Boyeldieu 5
2004–05 Division 1 10th SF 26 6 5 15 48 68 −20 Ingrid Boyeldieu 12
2005–06 Division 1 8th R16 24 9 4 11 32 37 −5 Sarah Hamraoui 5
2006–07 Division 1 7th R32 23 6 8 9 38 37 +1 Aurélie Mula 9
2007–08 Division 1 5th RU 27 13 4 10 36 39 −3 Marie-Laure Delie 21
2008–09 Division 1 8th R32 23 7 7 9 30 31 −1 Candice Prévost 7
2009–10 Division 1 3rd W 27 19 6 2 74 12 +62 Camille Abily 12
2010–11 Division 1 2nd R32 24 18 1 5 53 17 +36 Kátia 12
2011–12 Division 1 4th SF UEFA Champions League R16 31 19 6 6 78 28 +50 Kenza Dali 13
2012–13 Division 1 2nd SF 27 22 2 3 94 12 +82 Kosovare Asllani 22
2013–14 Division 1 2nd RU UEFA Champions League R32 30 23 3 4 107 14 +93 Marie-Laure Delie 29
2014–15 Division 1 2nd R16 UEFA Champions League RU 34 27 4 111 16 +95 Marie-Laure Delie 20
2015–16 Division 1 2nd SF UEFA Champions League SF 35 25 7 3 108 24 +84 Cristiane 23
2016–17 Division 1 3rd RU UEFA Champions League RU 37 26 5 6 116 26 +90 Marie-Laure Delie 28
2017–18 Division 1 2nd W 28 24 2 2 74 14 +60 Marie-Antoinette Katoto 26
2018–19 Division 1 2nd QF UEFA Champions League QF 31 25 3 3 84 23 +61 Marie-Antoinette Katoto 30
2019–20 Division 1 2nd RU RU UEFA Champions League SF 28 21 5 2 97 13 +84 Marie-Antoinette Katoto 24

References

  1. "Historique". psgfc.fr. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  2. "Les 10 dates du PSG féminin". SO FOOT.com. 14 May 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  3. "Match Preview: PSG Women Look to Take Down Super Team Lyon". UEFA.com. 13 November 2019. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  4. "'I'm Here to Win, to Lift Trophies' – Ramona Bachmann on Why She Joined PSG". PSG Talk. 4 July 2020. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  5. "Paris Saint-Germain Football Club". Footofeminin.fr. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  6. "Féminines". Paris.canal-historique. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  7. "France - List of Women Final Tables". RSSSF. 16 August 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  8. "France - List of Women Second Level (N1B) Final Tables". RSSSF. 25 May 2001. Retrieved 19 July 2019.


Official websites
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.