Norway Women's National Football Team - Overall Official Record

Overall Official Record

Competition Stage Result Opponent Position / Notes
1984 EC QS GS: Gr.1 2–2 1–0 Iceland
3–0 3–0 Finland
0–2 1–2 Sweden 2 / 4
1987 EC QS GS: Gr.1 0–0 2–0 Finland
3–2 0–0 West Germany
2–2 5–2 Denmark 1 / 4
1987 EC SF 2–0 Italy
F 2–1 Sweden
1989 EC QS GS: Gr.3 3–3 0–2 Finland
0–1 1–2 Denmark
2–0 3–1 England 2 / 4
QF 2–1 3–0 Netherlands
1989 EC SF 2–1 Sweden
F 1–4 West Germany
1991 EC QS GS: Gr.3 1–0 4–0 Finland
4–0 1–0 Belgium
2–0 0–0 England 1 / 4
QF 2–1 2–0 Hungary
1991 EC SF 0–0 Sweden
F 1–3 Germany
1991 WC GS: Gr.1 0–4 China PR
4–0 New Zealand
2–1 Denmark 2 / 4
QF 3–2 Italy
SF 4–1 Sweden
F 1–2 United States
1993 EC QS GS: Gr.1 10–0 6–0 Switzerland
0–0 8–0 Belgium 1 / 3
QF 3–0 3–0 Netherlands
1993 EC SF 1–0 Denmark
F 1–0 Italy
1995 EC QS GS: Gr.1 6–1 9–0 Czech Republic
8–0 4–0 Hungary
2–2 4–0 Finland 1 / 4
QF 3–1 4–2 Italy
SF 4–3 1–4 Sweden
1995 WC GS: Gr.2 8–0 Nigeria
2–0 England
7–0 Canada 1 / 4
QF 3–1 Denmark
SF 1–0 United States
F 2–0 Germany
1996 SO GS: Gr.1 2–2 Brazil
3–2 Germany
4–0 Japan 1 / 4
SF 1–2 United States
BM 2–0 Brazil
1997 EC QS GS: Gr.1 (Class A) 17–0 4–0 Slovakia
3–1 0–0 Germany
2–0 7–0 Finland 1 / 4
1997 EC GS: Gr.2 5–0 Denmark
0–0 Germany
0–2 Italy 3 / 4
1999 WC QS GS: Gr.3 (Class A) 6–1 0–0 Netherlands
0–1 3–2 Germany
2–1 2–0 England 1 / 4
1999 WC GS: Gr.3 2–1 Russia
7–1 Canada
4–0 Japan 1 / 4
QF 3–1 Sweden
SF 0–5 China
3P 0–0 Brazil
2000 SO GS: Gr.2 0–2 United States
3–1 Nigeria
2–1 China PR 2 / 4
SF 1–0 Germany
F 3–2 United States
2001 EC QS GS: Gr.2 (Class A) 4–0 1–0 Switzerland
4–0 5–0 Portugal
3–0 8–0 England 1 / 4
2001 EC Gr.2 3–0 France
1–1 Italy
0–1 Denmark 2 / 4
SF 0–1 Germany
2003 WC QS GS: Gr.1 (Class A) 4–0 1–1 Ukraine
5–0 5–1 Czech Republic
3–0 3–1 France 1 / 4
2003 WC Gr.2 2–0 France
1–4 Brazil
7–1 South Korea 2 / 4
QF 0–1 USA
2005 EC QS GS: Gr.2 (Class A) 6–0 6–1 Belgium
2–0 2–0 Netherlands
1–1 1–2 Denmark
2–0 2–0 Spain 2 / 5
Play-offs 7–2 2–1 Iceland
2005 EC GS: Gr.2 0–1 Germany
1–1 France
5–3 Italy 2 / 4
SF 3–2 Sweden
F 1–3 Germany
2007 WC QS GS: Gr.1 (Class A) 4–1 1–1 Ukraine
4–0 3–0 Serbia
1–0 2–1 Italy
3–0 4–0 Greece 1 / 5
2007 WC Gr.3 2–1 Canada
1–1 Australia
7–2 Ghana 1 / 4
QF 1–0 China PR
SF 0–3 Germany
3P 1–4 United States
2008 SO Gr.3 2–0 United States
1–0 New Zealand
1–5 Japan 2 / 4
QF 1–2 Brazil
2009 EC QS GS: Gr.6 3–0 7–0 Israel
3–0 4–0 Austria
3–0 0–0 Russia
3–0 3–0 Poland 1 / 5
2009 EC GS: Gr.2 0–4 Germany
1–0 Iceland
1–1 France 3 / 4
QF 3–1 Sweden
SF 1–3 Germany
2011 WC QS GS: Gr.2 3–0 2–2 Netherlands
1–0 4–0 Slovakia
14–0 7–0 Macedonia
5–0 3–0 Belarus 1 / 5
Play-offs 1–0 2–0 Ukraine
2011 WC GS: Gr.4 1–0 Equatorial Guinea
0–3 Brazil
1–2 Australia 3 / 4
2013 EC QS GS: Gr.3 1–3 2-1 Iceland
6–0 5-0 Hungary
1–0 3-0 Belgium
1–3 2-0 Northern Ireland
3-0 11-0 Bulgaria 1 / 6

Read more about this topic:  Norway Women's National Football Team

Famous quotes containing the words official record, official and/or record:

    Well, on the official record you’re my son. But on this post you’re just another trooper. You heard me tell the recruits what I need from them. Twice that I will expect from you.... You’ve chosen my way of life. I hope you have the guts enough to endure it. But put outa your mind any romantic ideas that it’s a way to glory. It’s a life of suffering and of hardship and uncompromising devotion to your oath and your duty.
    James Kevin McGuinness, and John Ford. Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke (John Wayne)

    We were that generation called “silent,” but we were silent neither, as some thought, because we shared the period’s official optimism nor, as others thought, because we feared its official repression. We were silent because the exhilaration of social action seemed to many of us just one more way of escaping the personal, of masking for a while that dread of the meaningless which was man’s fate.
    Joan Didion (b. 1935)

    ... many of the things which we deplore, the prevalence of tuberculosis, the mounting record of crime in certain sections of the country, are not due just to lack of education and to physical differences, but are due in great part to the basic fact of segregation which we have set up in this country and which warps and twists the lives not only of our Negro population, but sometimes of foreign born or even of religious groups.
    Eleanor Roosevelt (1884–1962)