Similarities between 2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women)
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women) have 23 things in common (in Unionpedia): AD Peña Nuestra Señora de la Antigua, AD Torrejón CF (women), Athletic Club Femenino, Barcelona, Bilbao, CD Híspalis, CD Nuestra Señora de Belén, CE Sabadell (women), CF Pozuelo de Alarcón Femenino, CFF Estudiantes de Huelva, Extremadura UD Femenino, Huelva, Levante UD Femenino, Madrid, Rayo Vallecano Femenino, RCD Espanyol Femenino, Real Oviedo (women), SD Lagunak (women), Segunda División (women), Seville, Valencia, 2002–03 Superliga Femenina, 2004–05 Superliga Femenina.
AD Peña Nuestra Señora de la Antigua
Asociación Deportiva Peña Nuestra Señora de la Antigua, also known as Corderex La Antigua for sponsorship reasons, was a Spanish women's football club from Mérida settled in the city's Nuestra Señora de la Antigua district.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and AD Peña Nuestra Señora de la Antigua · AD Peña Nuestra Señora de la Antigua and Primera División (women) ·
AD Torrejón CF (women)
AD Torrejón CF Femenino is a Spanish women's football team from Torrejón de Ardoz and the women's section of AD Torrejón.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and AD Torrejón CF (women) · AD Torrejón CF (women) and Primera División (women) ·
Athletic Club Femenino
Athletic Club Femenino is the women's football (soccer) section of Athletic Bilbao, competing in the Spanish First Division.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Athletic Club Femenino · Athletic Club Femenino and Primera División (women) ·
Barcelona
Barcelona is a city in Spain.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Barcelona · Barcelona and Primera División (women) ·
Bilbao
Bilbao (Bilbo) is a city in northern Spain, the largest city in the province of Biscay and in the Basque Country as a whole.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Bilbao · Bilbao and Primera División (women) ·
CD Híspalis
Club Deportivo Híspalis is a Spanish football club from Seville founded in 1972.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and CD Híspalis · CD Híspalis and Primera División (women) ·
CD Nuestra Señora de Belén
Club Deportivo Nuestra Señora de Belén, also known as BigMat Fontecha for sponsorship reasons, is a Spanish women's football club from Burgos.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and CD Nuestra Señora de Belén · CD Nuestra Señora de Belén and Primera División (women) ·
CE Sabadell (women)
CE Sabadell (femení) is the women's football team of CE Sabadell.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and CE Sabadell (women) · CE Sabadell (women) and Primera División (women) ·
CF Pozuelo de Alarcón Femenino
CF Pozuelo de Alarcón Femenino is the women's football team of CF Pozuelo de Alarcón, currently playing in Spain's second level, Segunda División.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and CF Pozuelo de Alarcón Femenino · CF Pozuelo de Alarcón Femenino and Primera División (women) ·
CFF Estudiantes de Huelva
Club de Fútbol Femenino Estudiantes de Huelva was a Spanish women's football team from Huelva created in 1998 and disbanded in 2006.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and CFF Estudiantes de Huelva · CFF Estudiantes de Huelva and Primera División (women) ·
Extremadura UD Femenino
Extremadura Unión Deportiva Femenino, formerly known as CF Puebla Extremadura and later as Extremadura Femenino CF, is a Spanish women football club from Almendralejo.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Extremadura UD Femenino · Extremadura UD Femenino and Primera División (women) ·
Huelva
Huelva is a city in southwestern Spain, the capital of the province of Huelva in the autonomous region of Andalusia.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Huelva · Huelva and Primera División (women) ·
Levante UD Femenino
Levante Unión Deportiva Femenino is the women's football team of Valencian football club Levante UD playing.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Levante UD Femenino · Levante UD Femenino and Primera División (women) ·
Madrid
Madrid is the capital of Spain and the largest municipality in both the Community of Madrid and Spain as a whole.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Madrid · Madrid and Primera División (women) ·
Rayo Vallecano Femenino
Rayo Vallecano Femenino is the women's football section of Madrid-based club Rayo Vallecano, currently playing in the Spanish top league.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Rayo Vallecano Femenino · Primera División (women) and Rayo Vallecano Femenino ·
RCD Espanyol Femenino
RCD Espanyol Femení (Real Club Deportivo Español) is the women's football section of RCD Espanyol and was founded in 1970.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and RCD Espanyol Femenino · Primera División (women) and RCD Espanyol Femenino ·
Real Oviedo (women)
Real Oviedo Femenino, until 2017 known as Oviedo Moderno Club de Fútbol, is a Spanish women's football club based in Oviedo, Asturias.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Real Oviedo (women) · Primera División (women) and Real Oviedo (women) ·
SD Lagunak (women)
SD Lagunak women's team represents SD Lagunak in women's football.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and SD Lagunak (women) · Primera División (women) and SD Lagunak (women) ·
Segunda División (women)
The Segunda División, formerly Primera Nacional Femenina de Fútbol, is the second level of league competition for Spanish women's football.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Segunda División (women) · Primera División (women) and Segunda División (women) ·
Seville
Seville (Sevilla) is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Andalusia and the province of Seville, Spain.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Seville · Primera División (women) and Seville ·
Valencia
Valencia, officially València, on the east coast of Spain, is the capital of the autonomous community of Valencia and the third-largest city in Spain after Madrid and Barcelona, with around 800,000 inhabitants in the administrative centre.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Valencia · Primera División (women) and Valencia ·
2002–03 Superliga Femenina
The 2002–03 Superliga season was the 15th edition since the competition's establishment and the second one since its unification.
2002–03 Superliga Femenina and 2003–04 Superliga Femenina · 2002–03 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women) ·
2004–05 Superliga Femenina
The 2004–05 Superliga season was the 17th since its establishment.
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and 2004–05 Superliga Femenina · 2004–05 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women) ·
The list above answers the following questions
- What 2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women) have in common
- What are the similarities between 2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women)
2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women) Comparison
2003–04 Superliga Femenina has 34 relations, while Primera División (women) has 119. As they have in common 23, the Jaccard index is 15.03% = 23 / (34 + 119).
References
This article shows the relationship between 2003–04 Superliga Femenina and Primera División (women). To access each article from which the information was extracted, please visit: