Hammarby women's team celebrating their 1-0 extra-time cup victory over Häcken at 3 Arena with a modest crowd.
Hammarby women's team celebrating their 1-0 extra-time cup victory over Häcken at 3 Arena with a modest crowd.
Image generated by AI

Hammarby claims women's cup title after extra time win

Image generated by AI

Hammarby defeated Häcken 1–0 in extra time to secure a second straight cup title. The match at 3 arena drew just 3,793 spectators.

Hammarby secured the Swedish women's cup title with a 1–0 victory over BK Häcken in extra time on Saturday. Mari Nyhagen scored the decisive goal in the 107th minute.

The match was the third between the teams in three weeks and finished 0–0 after regular time. Häcken was without injured captain Anna Anvegård.

Attendance of 3,793 marked a sharp drop from last year's 13,080. Both Monica Jusu Bah and Alice Carlsson criticized the lack of marketing from the Swedish Football Association.

What people are saying

Initial reactions on X celebrate Hammarby's 1-0 extra-time win over Häcken for their second straight Swedish women's cup title, praising Mari Nyhagen's goal and revenge for a prior Europa Cup loss, while some express disappointment over low attendance of under 4,000 spectators.

Related Articles

BK Häcken's Felicia Schröder scores the 1-0 winner against Hammarby in the UEFA Women's Europa Cup final first leg.
Image generated by AI

Häcken wins first leg of Europa Cup final against Hammarby 1–0

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

BK Häcken beat Hammarby IF 1–0 in the first leg of the historic final in Uefa's new Europa Cup for women. Felicia Schröder scored the winner in the 22nd minute with an assist from Monica Jusu Bah. The return leg is on May 1 in Gothenburg.

BK Häcken won the historic first Europa Cup title with a 3–2 win (4–2 aggregate) over Hammarby in the second leg. 19-year-old Felicia Schröder scored a hattrick and all four goals across the finals. Häcken held on despite Hammarby's fightback to 2–2.

Reported by AI

Mjällby AIF defeated Hammarby 2-1 in the Swedish Cup final at Strawberry Arena in Solna. The win gave the club its first-ever cup title in front of a record crowd.

Sweden's women's national football team led 1-0 but ultimately lost 1-2 to Denmark in the World Cup qualifier at Gamla Ullevi in Gothenburg. Monica Jusu Bah scored her first international goal early on, but Pernille Harder equalized and Janni Thomsen decided the match in added time. The young Swedish backline faced criticism but was defended by head coach Tony Gustavsson.

Reported by AI

Sweden's women's volleyball team defeated Lithuania 3–0 in the European League on Friday.

Sweden defeated Czechia 87–76 in a World Cup qualifier at Hovet in Stockholm. The win keeps the basketball World Cup dream alive.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline