2003 in Norwegian football

Results from Norwegian football in 2003.

Norwegian Premier League

Pl: Place |G: Games played| W: Games won| D: Games draw| L: Games lost| P: Points|

Pl Team G W D L Goals P
1 Rosenborg 26 19 4 3 68–28 61 UEFA Champions League
2 Bodø/Glimt 26 14 5 7 45–30 47 UEFA Cup (Cup loser)
3 Stabæk 26 11 9 6 51–35 42 UEFA Cup
4 Odd Grenland 26 11 5 10 46–43 38 UEFA Cup
5 Viking 26 9 10 7 46–34 37
6 Brann 26 10 7 9 45–47 37
7 Lillestrøm 26 10 7 9 33–35 37
8 Sogndal 26 9 8 9 43–46 35
9 Molde 26 9 4 13 32–41 31
10 Lyn 26 8 6 12 34–45 30
11 Tromsø 26 8 5 13 30–52 29
12 Vålerenga 26 6 10 10 30–33 28 (Play-off)
13 Aalesund 26 7 7 12 30–43 28 (Relegated)
14 Bryne 26 7 1 18 35–56 22 (Relegated)

Play off

November 10: Sandefjord – Vålerenga 0–0

November 22: Vålerenga – Sandefjord 5–3 (agg. 5–3)

Vålerenga stay up.

Top scorers

17 goals: Harald Martin Brattbakk, Rosenborg

15 goals: Frode Johnsen, Rosenborg

13 goals: Håvard Flo, Sogndal

11 goals: Magne Hoseth, Molde

Erik Nevland, Viking

10 goals: Edwin van Ankeren, Odd Grenland

Thomas Finstad, Stabæk

Norwegian First Division

Pl: Place |G: Games played| W: Games won| D: Games draw| L: Games lost| P: Points|

Pl Team G W D L Goals P
1 Hamarkameratene 30 19 6 5 60–29 63 (Promoted)
2 Fredrikstad 30 19 5 6 68–37 62 (Promoted)
3 Sandefjord 30 19 4 7 71–41 61 (Play-off)
4 Raufoss 30 17 5 8 75–47 56
5 Hønefoss BK 30 16 7 7 55–41 55
6 Haugesund 30 13 10 7 53–42 49
7 Mandalskameratene 30 14 7 9 57–51 49
8 Skeid 30 13 6 11 46–47 45
9 Start 30 12 4 14 53–50 40
10 Strømsgodset 30 10 7 13 56–58 37
11 Hødd 30 9 8 13 51–54 35
12 Moss 30 8 11 11 34–39 35
13 Bærum 30 7 6 17 34–58 27 (Relegated)
14 Oslo Øst 30 5 7 18 36–67 20 (Relegated) 1)
15 Ørn-Horten 30 5 5 20 40–83 20 (Relegated)
16 Alta 30 3 4 23 31–76 13 (Relegated)

1): Oslo Øst 2 points deducted for financial irregularities.

National Cup

European Cups 2003/04

Norwegian representatives

Second preliminary round

July 30: Bohemians Dublin (Ireland) – Rosenborg 0–1

August 6: Rosenborg – Bohemians Dublin 4–0 (agg. 5–0)

Third preliminary round

August 13: Rosenborg – Deportivo La Coruna (Spain) 0–0

August 26: Deportivo La Coruna – Rosenborg 1–0 (agg. 1–0)

Preliminary round

August 14: Molde – KI Klaksvik (Faroe Islands) 2–0

NSI Runavik (Faroe Islands) – Lyn 1–3

August 28: KI Klaksvik – Molde 0–4 (agg. 0–6)

Lyn – NSI Runavik 6–0 (agg. 9–1)

First round

September 24: Leiria (Portugal) – Molde 1–0

PAOK Saloniki (Greece) – Lyn 0–1
Ventspils (Latvia) – Rosenborg 1–4
Vålerenga – Grazer AK (Austria) 0–0

October 15: Grazer AK – Vålerenga 1–1 (agg. 1–1, Vålerenga on away goals)

Lyn – PAOK Saloniki 0–3 (agg. 1–3)
Molde – Leiria 3–1 (agg. 3–2)
Rosenborg – Ventspils 6–0 (agg. 10–1)

Second round

October 29: Rosenborg – Crvena Zvezda (Serbia and Montenegro) 0–0

November 6: Benfica (Portugal) – Molde 3–1

Vålerenga – Wisla Krakow (Poland) 0–0

November 27: Crvena Zvezda – Rosenborg 0–1 (agg. 0–1)

Molde – Benfica 0–2 (agg. 1–5)
Wisla Kraków – Vålerenga 0–0 (agg. 0–0, 3–4 on penalties)

Third round

February 26: Benfica (Portugal) – Rosenborg 1–0

Vålerenga – Newcastle (England) 1–1

March 3: Newcastle – Vålerenga 3–1 (agg. 4–2)

Rosenborg – Benfica 2–1 (agg. 2–2, Benfica on away goals)

Intertoto Cup

No Norwegian representative this season.

Toppserien

1. Trondheims/Ørn 18 15 2 1 53- 7 47 UEFA Cup
2. Kolbotn 18 13 0 5 63–28 39
3. Asker 18 12 3 3 54–20 39
4. Røa 18 7 6 5 23–27 27
5. Fløya 18 8 1 9 28–40 25
6. Arna-Bjørnar 18 6 4 8 43–48 22
7. Team Strømmen 18 6 2 10 33–47 20
8. Klepp 18 3 8 7 25–36 17
---------------------------------------
9. Liungen 18 5 2 11 32–45 17 Relegated
10.Larvik 18 0 2 16 14–70 2 Relegated

Women First Division

1. Sandviken 18 15 2 1 73–16 47 Promoted
2. Medkila 18 13 3 2 57–27 42 Promoted
---------------------------------------
3. Amazon Grimstad 18 11 2 5 49–29 35
4. Skeid 18 11 1 6 50–26 34
5. Byåsen 18 9 1 8 43–52 28
6. Fortuna 18 7 4 7 32–29 25
7. Kattem 18 5 3 10 27–40 18
8. Haugar 18 4 1 13 18–52 13
---------------------------------------
9. Vålerenga 18 3 1 14 20–61 10 Relegated
10.Nittedal 18 2 2 14 14–51 8 Relegated

Norwegian representatives

Women UEFA Cup, Group 6

(in Kolbotn)

August 21: Kolbotn – Wroclaw (Poland) 15–2
August 23: Kolbotn – UCD (Ireland) 8–0
August 25: Kolbotn – Juvisy (France) 2–1

Final Table, UEFA Cup Group 6

1. Kolbotn IL 3 3 0 0 25- 3 9
2. FCF Juvisy 3 2 0 1 10- 3 6
3. KS AZS Wroclaw 3 1 0 2 5–18 3
4. University College Dublin 3 0 0 3 1–17 0

Quarterfinal

November 22: Malmø FF (Sweden) – Kolbotn 2–0
November 30: Kolbotn – Malmø FF 1–0 (agg. 1–2)

National team

Men

United Arab Emirates  1–1  Norway
Srour 63' Helstad 72'
Attendance: 800
Referee: Mohamed Omar (UAE)


Oman  1–2  Norway
Shaaban 50' Karadaş 63'
Rushfeldt 82'
Attendance: 500
Referee: Al-Ajmi (OMA)
Oman fielded its U23-team (Olympic Team)


Greece  1–0  Norway
Kyrgiakos 25'
Attendance: 8.000
Referee: Gomes Costa (POR)


Luxembourg  0–2  Norway
Rushfeldt 58'
Solskjær 73'
Attendance: 3.000
Referee: Dobrinov (BUL)


Republic of Ireland  1–0  Norway
Duff 17'
Attendance: 32.643
Referee: McCurry (SCO)


Norway  2–0  Finland
Leonhardsen 22'
T.A. Flo 80'
Attendance: 13.436
Referee: Clark (SCO)


Denmark  1–0  Norway
Grønkjær 5'
Attendance: 41.824
Referee: Poll (ENG)


Norway  1–1  Romania
Solskjær 78' (pen) Ganea 64'
Attendance: 24.890
Referee: Michel (SVK)


Norway  0–0  Scotland
Attendance: 12.758
Referee: Vuorela (FIN)


Bosnia and Herzegovina  1–0  Norway
Bajramovic 86'
Attendance: 18.000
Referee: Bre (FRA)


Norway  0–1  Portugal
Pauleta 9'
Attendance: 11.014
Referee: Bennett (ENG)


Norway  1–0  Luxembourg
T.A. Flo 19'
Attendance: 22.255
Referee: Szabo (HUN)


Spain  2–1  Norway
Raúl 21'
H. Berg 85' (own goal)
Report Iversen 15'
Attendance: 53.000
Referee: Poll (ENG)


Norway  0–3  Spain
Report Raúl 34'
Vicente 49'
Etxeberria 57'
Attendance: 25.100
Referee: Collina (ITA)
Spain won 5–1 on aggregate and qualify for EURO 2004

Women

January 23: Norway – United States 1–3, friendly

January 26: Norway – Germany 2–2, friendly

January 29: China – Norway 1–1, friendly

February 17: Norway – Denmark 3–3, friendly

February 20: Norway – Denmark 4–0, friendly

March 14: Sweden – Norway 1–1, friendly

March 16: Norway – United States 0–1, friendly

March 18: Norway – Canada 1–0, friendly

March 20: Norway – France 1–0, friendly

May 11: Norway – Belgium 6–0, European Championship qualifier

May 15: Norway – Netherlands 2–0, European Championship qualifier

August 2: Norway – Nigeria 3–2, friendly

September 11: Norway – Denmark 1–1, European Championship qualifier

September 20: Norway – France 2–0, World Cup 1st round

September 24: Norway – Brazil 1–4, World Cup 1st round

September 27: South Korea – Norway 1–7, World Cup 1st round

October 1: United States – Norway 1–0, World Cup quarterfinal

November 1: Spain – Norway 0–2, European Championship qualifier

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