The 2004 season was the 99th season of competitive football in Norway.
Men's football
[edit]
League season
[edit]
Tippeligaen
[edit]
Main article: 2004 Tippeligaen
Pos
Team
v
t
e
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1
Rosenborg (C)
26
14
6
6
52
34
+18
48
Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round
2
Vålerenga
26
13
9
4
40
22
+18
48
Qualification for the Champions League second qualifying round
3
Brann
26
12
4
10
46
40
+6
40
Qualification for the UEFA Cup second qualifying round[a]
4
Tromsø
26
12
4
10
38
32
+6
40
5
Ham-Kam
26
10
8
8
34
33
+1
38
6
Lyn
26
9
10
7
30
31
−1
37
7
Lillestrøm
26
8
11
7
45
33
+12
35
8
Odd Grenland
26
9
8
9
47
44
+3
35
9
Viking
26
7
12
7
31
33
−2
33
Qualification for the UEFA Cup first qualifying round[b]
10
Fredrikstad
26
9
5
12
42
54
−12
32
11
Molde
26
7
10
9
34
37
−3
31
12
Bodø/Glimt (O)
26
7
6
13
28
41
−13
27
Qualification for the relegation play-offs
13
Stabæk (R)
26
7
6
13
25
40
−15
27
Relegation to First Division
14
Sogndal (R)
26
5
7
14
39
57
−18
22
Source: fotball.no Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored. (C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (R) Relegated Notes:
^Brann qualified for the UEFA Cup second qualifying round as Norwegian Cup winners. Their spot in the UEFA Cup as third-place finishers was passed down to Tromsø, the first team in the table not already qualified for any European competition.
^Viking qualified for the UEFA Cup first qualifying round through the UEFA Fair Play ranking award.
September 14: Panathinaikos (Greece) – Rosenborg 2–1
September 29: Rosenborg – Arsenal (England) 1–1
October 20: Rosenborg – PSV Eindhoven (Netherlands) 1–2
November 2: PSV Eindhoven – Rosenborg 1–0
November 24: Rosenborg – Panathinaikos 2–2
December 7: Arsenal – Rosenborg 5–1
UEFA Cup
[edit]
Main article: 2004–05 UEFA Cup
Second qualifying round
[edit]
Main article: 2004–05 UEFA Cup second qualifying round
Team 1
Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg
Odd Grenland
4–3
Ekranas
3–1
1–2
Stabæk
6–2
Haka
3–1
3–1
Bodø/Glimt
3–3 (8–7 p)
Levadia
2–1
1–2 (a.e.t.)
First round
[edit]
Main article: 2004–05 UEFA Cup first round
Team 1
Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg
Bodø/Glimt
1–2
Beşiktaş
1–1
0–1
Odd Grenland
1–5
Feyenoord
0–1
1–4
Sochaux
9–0
Stabæk
4–0
5–0
Intertoto Cup
[edit]
No Norwegian representative this season.
UEFA Women's Cup
[edit]
Main article: 2004–05 UEFA Women's Cup
Norwegian Representatives
[edit]
Trondheims/Ørn (UEFA Cup)
Second qualifying round
[edit]
Group 4
[edit]
2004 in Norwegian football
Tournament details
Teams
43 (42 associations)
Final positions
Champions
FFC Turbine Potsdam (1st title)
Runners-up
Djurgården/Älvsjö
Tournament statistics
Top scorer(s)
Conny Pohlers (14 goals)
← 2003–04
2005–06 →
International football competition
The UEFA Women's Cup 2004–05 was the fourth edition of the UEFA Women's Cup football club tournament. It was won by Germany's FFC Turbine Potsdam against Djurgården of Sweden in the final for their first title in the competition. It was the second time a German side won the competition.[3][4]
Teams
[edit]
Second qualifying round
Umeå (TH)
Turbine Potsdam (CH)
Arsenal (CH)
Djurgården (CH)
Brøndby (CH)
Trondheims-Ørn (CH)
Torres (CH)
First qualifying round
Mašinac Classic Niš (CH)
Gömrükçü Baku (CH)
Slavia Prague (CH)
Athletic Club Neskak (CH)
KR (CH)
Rapide Wezemaal (CH)
Energy Voronezh (CH)
Neulengbach (CH)
Montpellier (CH)
Alma (CH)
Bobruichanka Bobruisk (CH)
Zuchwil (CH)
Maccabi Holon (CH)
Ter Leede (CH)
ZNK-SFK 2000 (CH)
Viktória FC-Szombathely (CH)
AZS Wrocław (CH)
1° Dezembro (CH)
Super Sport Sofia (CH)
Metalist Kharkiv (CH)
Hibernian (CH)
Cardiff City (CW)
Aegina (CH)
Gintra Universitetas (CH)
KRKA Novo Mesto (CH)
CFF Clujana (CH)
MPS (CH)
Žiar nad Hronom (CH)
Codru Anenii Noi (CH)
KÍ Klaksvík (CH)
Skiponjat (CH)
University College Dublin (CW)
Maksimir (CH)
Pärnu JK (CH)
Newtownabbey Strikers (CH)
PAOK Ledra (CH)
Qualifying round
[edit]
Main article: 2004–05 UEFA Women's Cup qualifying round
UEFA Women's Cup and UEFA Women's Champions League
UEFA Women's Cup era, 2001–2009
Seasons
2001–02
2002–03
2003–04
2004–05
2005–06
2006–07
2007–08
2008–09
Finals
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
UEFA Women's Champions League era, 2009–present
Seasons
2009–10
2010–11
2011–12
2012–13
2013–14
2014–15
2015–16
2016–17
2017–18
2018–19
2019–20
2020–21
2021–22
2022–23
2023–24
2024–25
2025–26
2026–27
Finals
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Finals
Records and statistics
hat-tricks
Winning managers
UEFA coefficient
Matches
In København, Denmark
September 14: Trondheims/Ørn – Alma KTZH (Kazakhstan) 3–0
September 16: Trondheims/Ørn – Energy Voronezh (Russia) 1–1
September 18: Brøndby (Denmark) – Trondheims/Ørn 0–2
Quarter-finals
[edit]
Team 1
Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg
Bobruichanka Bobruisk
1–6
Trondheims-Ørn
0–4
1–2
Semi-finals
[edit]
Team 1
Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg
Turbine Potsdam
7–1
Trondheims-Ørn
4–0
3–1
National team
[edit]
Norway men's national football team
[edit]
Main article: Norway national football team
Date
Venue
Opponent
Res.*
Competition
Norwegian goalscorers
January 22
Hong Kong
Sweden
3–0
Friendly
Frode Johnsen, Håvard Flo (2)
January 25
Hong Kong
Honduras
3–1
Friendly
Harald Martin Brattbakk, Frode Johnsen, Magne Hoseth
January 28
Singapore
Singapore
5–2
Friendly
Anders Stadheim, Alexander Aas, Håvard Flo (2), Harald Martin Brattbakk
February 18
Belfast
Northern Ireland
4–1
Friendly
Morten Gamst Pedersen (2), Steffen Iversen, Own Goal
March 31
Beograd
Serbia and Montenegro
1–0
Friendly
Martin Andresen
April 28
Oslo
Russia
3–2
Friendly
Martin Andresen, Sigurd Rushfeldt, Jan Gunnar Solli
May 27
Oslo
Wales
0–0
Friendly
August 18
Oslo
Belgium
2–2
Friendly
Frode Johnsen, Vidar Riseth
September 4
Palermo
Italy
1–2
WCQ
John Carew
September 8
Oslo
Belarus
1–1
WCQ
Vidar Riseth
October 9
Glasgow
Scotland
1–0
WCQ
Steffen Iversen
October 13
Oslo
Slovenia
3–0
WCQ
John Carew, Morten Gamst Pedersen, Alexander Ødegaard
November 16
London
Australia
2–2
Friendly
Steffen Iversen, Morten Gamst Pedersen
Note: Norway's goals first Explanation:
WCQ = FIFA World Cup 2006 Qualifier
Norway women's national football team
[edit]
Main article: Norway women's national football team
March 7: Belgium – Norway 1–6 European Championship qualifier
March 14: Norway – Finland 4–1, friendly
March 16: Norway – Italy 3–0, friendly
March 18: Norway – China 0–0, friendly
March 20: Norway – United States 1–4, friendly
May 22: Netherlands – Norway 0–2, European Championship qualifier
May 27: Denmark – Norway 2–1, European Championship qualifier
July 21: Germany – Norway 0–1, friendly
July 24: Sweden – Norway 0–4, friendly
September 4: Norway – Italy 3–1, friendly
October 2: Norway – Spain 2–0, European Championship qualifier
November 10: Iceland – Norway 2–7, European Championship play-off
November 13: Norway – Iceland 2–1, European Championship play-off