Country | England |
---|---|
Founded | 2014 |
Number of teams | 10 |
Level on pyramid | 2 |
Promotion to | FA WSL 1 |
Relegation to |
WPL Northern Division WPL Southern Division |
Domestic cup(s) | FA Women's Cup |
League cup(s) | FA WSL Cup |
Current champions |
Yeovil Town (1st title) (2016) |
Most championships | Reading, Sunderland, Yeovil Town (1 title) |
TV partners | BT Sport |
2017–18 |
The Football Association Women's Super League 2 (FA WSL 2) is the second-highest division of women's football in England.
WSL 2 was founded in 2014 and 10 teams compete in it. There is currently no relegation from the WSL 2 to the FA Women's Premier League in place. However, two teams are promoted to the WSL 1 per season.
The league was played in summer between April and October until the 2016 season. WSL 1 and 2 became winter leagues from 2017–18, playing from September to May.
For the 2014 season the WSL was expanded to create a second division with 9 new teams added and one team being relegated from the WSL 1. WSL 1 remains as 8 teams, with one new team inserted, with the WSL 2 having 10 teams. The new WSL 1 licence was awarded to Manchester City. Doncaster Rovers Belles were relegated to the WSL 2, with nine new licences awarded to: London Bees; Durham; Aston Villa; Millwall Lionesses; Yeovil Town; Reading; Sunderland; Watford; and Oxford United. Doncaster Belles appealed against their demotion, but were unsuccessful.
In December 2014, the FA WSL announced a two-year plan to expand WSL 1 from an eight to 10-team league. Two teams will be promoted from WSL 2, while one team will be relegated to WSL 2. Also, for the first time, a team from the FA Women's Premier League earned promotion to WSL 2, effectively connecting the WSL to the rest of the English women's football pyramid.
This will leave WSL 1 with nine teams and WSL 2 with 10 teams for the 2016 season, and with the process repeated the following year, both WSL 1 and WSL 2 will have 10 teams each for the 2017–18 season. In addition to being able to prove their financial solvency, clubs applying for entry to the WSL must show they will attract an average of 350 spectators in 2016, increasing to at least 400 in 2017.