National association football team
Germany Women's U-17 Nickname(s) Die Nationalelf (The National Eleven)Association German Football Association (Deutscher Fußball-Bund, DFB) Confederation UEFA (Europe)Head coach Friederike Kromp Captain Janina Minge Most caps Marie Pollmann (30) Top scorer Kyra Malinowski (22)FIFA code GER
Germany 3–0 Norway (Steinfurt , Germany; 12 June 1992) Germany 11–0 Serbia (Albena , Bulgaria; 16 September 2008) Germany 11–0 Bulgaria (Dobrich , Bulgaria; 18 September 2008) Sweden 4–0 Germany (Sandviken , Sweden; 9 June 1999) Spain 4–0 Germany (Hinckley , England; 2 December 2013)Appearances 13 (first in 2008 ) Best result Champions (2008 , 2009 , 2012 , 2014 , 2016 , 2017 , 2019 , 2022 ) Appearances 7 (first in 2008 ) Best result Third place (2008 )
The Germany women's national under-17 football team (German : Deutsche Fußballnationalmannschaft (U-17-Juniorinnen) ) represents Germany in international women's association football and is governed by the German Football Association (DFB). The national team was founded in 1992 as U-16 national team. Since the summer of 2001, the age limit is 17.
Fixtures and results
Legend
Win
Draw
Lose
Fixture
2022
Current squad
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(October 2022 )
Previous squads
Competitive record
FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup
The German team participated in all tournaments until 2024 . Their best result was third place in 2008[1] [2]
Year
Result
2008
Third place
6
4
1
1
16
6
2010
Quarter-finals
4
3
0
1
22
2
2012
Fourth place
6
3
1
2
11
8
2014
Group stage
3
0
1
2
5
7
2016
Quarter-finals
4
2
1
1
6
4
2018
Quarter-finals
4
2
0
2
8
3
2022
Fourth place
6
4
1
1
16
6
2024
did not qualify
2025
to be determined
Total
7/9
33
18
5
10
84
36
UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship
The German team has participated in eleven of the twelve UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship winning 7 times and establishing a record for most european titles.[3]
Year
Result
2008
Champions
2
2
0
0
4
0
2009
Champions
2
2
0
0
11
1
2010
Third place
2
1
0
1
3
1
2011
Third place
2
1
1
0
10
4
2012
Champions
2
1
1
0
3
1
2013
did not qualify
2014
Champions
5
3
1
1
10
7
2015
Semi-finals
4
2
0
2
10
5
2016
Champions
5
2
3
0
10
5
2017
Champions
5
3
2
0
12
4
2018
Runners-up
5
3
1
1
20
5
2019
Champions
5
3
1
1
12
5
2020
Cancelled
2021
2022
Champions
5
4
1
0
9
2
2023
Group stage
3
1
0
2
6
4
2024
did not qualify
2025
to be determined
Total
13/15
47
28
11
8
120
44
Nordic Cup
From 1988 to 1997 and 2008 to present (U16 national team); from 1998 to 2007 (U-17 national team)[4]
Host / Year
Position
Denmark 1988
No participation
Norway 1989
5th place*
Sweden 1990
No participation
Finland 1991
No participation
Denmark 1992
No participation
Netherlands 1993
No participation
Iceland 1994
No participation
Norway 1995
No participation
Finland 1996
No participation
Sweden 1997
4th place (U-16)
Denmark 1998
Champions (U-17)
Netherlands 1999
4th place (U-17)
Finland 2000
Runners-up (U-17)
Norway 2001
Champions (U-17)
Iceland 2002
6th place (U-17)
Sweden 2003
Runners-up (U-17)
Denmark 2004
Third Place (U-17)
Norway 2005
Champions (U-17)
Finland 2006
Third Place (U-17)
Norway 2007
Third Place (U-17)
Iceland 2008
Champions (U-16)
Sweden 2009
Runners-up (U-16)
Denmark 2010
Runners-up (U-16)
Finland 2011
7th place (U-16)
Norway 2012
5th place (U-16)
Iceland 2013
Champions (U-16)
Sweden 2014
Champions (U-16)
Denmark 2015
Runners-up (U-16)
Norway 2016
Runners-up (U-16)
2017
Third Place (U-16)
Total
21/30
(* ) Note Norway 1989: Participated the selection of the Hessian Football Association
See also
References
External links