2009 in Estonian football
2009 in Estonian football | ||
---|---|---|
Meistriliiga winners | ||
TBD | ||
Estonian Cup winners | ||
FC Flora Tallinn | ||
SuperCup winners | ||
FC Flora Tallinn | ||
Champions League | ||
FC Levadia Tallinn (1Q) | ||
Europa League | ||
FC Flora Tallinn (2Q) FC Trans Narva (1Q) JK Kalju Nõmme (1Q) | ||
Estonian national team | ||
2010 World Cup qualification | ||
Estonian Footballer of the Year | ||
Raio Piiroja |
The 2009 season is the 18th competitive football season in Estonia.
National Leagues[]
Meistriliiga[]
Esiliiga[]
Estonian FA Cup[]
Flora Tallinn, playing in their 6th final, successfully defended the title, winning the cup for the 4th time overall. The normal and the extra time ended 0–0. The match went to a penalty shootout, where Flora 4–3. Kalju Nõmme played in their first ever cup final, defeating three Meistriliiga sides on the way. The final was played on 12 May at Kadrioru Stadium.
National Teams[]
A Team[]
U-21[]
Date | Comp. | Venue | Home Team | Result | Away Team | Scorers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 11 | Friendly | , Helsinki | Finland | 2 – 1 | Estonia | 28' | |
March 27 | Friendly | Stade Jacques Rimbault, Bourges | France | 3 – 0 | Estonia | ||
June 5 | Friendly | Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn | Estonia | 1 – 1 | Norway | Stüf 72' | |
June 9 | Friendly | , Falkenberg | Sweden | 2 – 1 | Estonia | 59' | |
August 12 | Euro 2011 Q | Stadion Breite, Schaffhausen | Switzerland | 0 – 1 | Estonia | Saag 31' | |
September 5 | Euro 2011 Q | A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn | Estonia | 2 – 0 | Georgia | Mošnikov 42', Anier 90' | |
September 9 | Euro 2011 Q | Linnastaadion, Rakvere | Estonia | 1 – 1 | Republic of Ireland | Saag 4' | |
October 9 | Euro 2011 Q | Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn | Estonia | 1 – 4 | Switzerland | Zenjov 7' | |
November 14 | Euro 2011 Q | Hanrapetakan Stadium, Yerevan | Armenia | 1 – 1 | Estonia | Artjunin 90+3' | |
November 18 | Euro 2011 Q | Rize Atatürk Stadium, Rize | Turkey | 0 – 0 | Estonia | ||
Notes | Euro 2011 Q – 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship qualification |
U-19[]
U-18[]
Date | Comp. | Venue | Home Team | Result | Away Team | Scorers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 21 | Friendly | , Riga | Latvia | 6 – 0 | Estonia | |
April 28 | Friendly | , Mellerud | Sweden | 5 – 0 | Estonia | |
April 30 | Friendly | , Ed | Sweden | 2 – 0 | Estonia | |
June 10 | Friendly | , Strassen | Luxembourg | 3 – 4 | Estonia | 17' Podholjuzin 44' 78' Own goal 48' |
U-17[]
Date | Comp. | Venue | Home Team | Result | Away Team | Scorers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 20 | Friendly | , Riga | Latvia | 2 – 3 | Estonia | 32', Raudsepp 40', 70' | |
January 22 | Friendly | , Riga | Latvia | 1 – 2 | Estonia | Elhi 1', Rääbis 58' | |
May 1 | Daugava Stadium, Riga | Estonia | 1 – 0 | Latvia | 10' | ||
May 2 | Daugava Stadium, Riga | Lithuania | 0 – 1 | Estonia | 2' | ||
July 26 | Friendly | Mikheil Meskhi Stadium, Tbilisi | Georgia | 3 – 1 | Estonia | 49' | |
July 28 | Friendly | Mikheil Meskhi Stadium, Tbilisi | Georgia | 3 – 1 | Estonia | Elhi 30' | |
August 19 | Friendly | Ta' Qali National Stadium training pitch, Ta' Qali | Malta | 0 – 1 | Estonia | 80' | |
August 21 | Friendly | Ta' Qali National Stadium training pitch, Ta' Qali | Malta | 1 – 0 | Estonia | ||
September 16 | Friendly | Töölön Pallokenttä, Helsinki | Finland | 3 – 0 | Estonia | ||
October 17 | EC10Q | Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn | Estonia | 0 – 0 | Ukraine | ||
October 19 | EC10Q | Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn | Estonia | 1 – 3 | France | 21' | |
October 22 | EC10Q | Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn | Estonia | 1 – 0 | Slovenia | 58' | |
Notes | EC10Q – 2010 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship qualification |
U-16[]
Date | Comp. | Venue | Home Team | Result | Away Team | Scorers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 1 | Friendly | , Riga | Latvia | 5 – 0 | Estonia | ||
April 28 | Friendly | Juchnowiec Dolny | Poland | 4 – 0 | Estonia | ||
April 30 | Friendly | Sokółka | Poland | 5 – 0 | Estonia | ||
September 8 | Friendly | Switzerland | 6 – 0 | Estonia | |||
September 10 | Friendly | Switzerland | 4 – 0 | Estonia | |||
November 11 | Friendly | Germany | 6 – 2 | Estonia | 68' 76' | ||
Unofficial match(es) | |||||||
April 17 | Saint Petersburg | Estonia | 5 – 0 | Koger 7' 40' Kirss 13' 16' 20' | |||
April 17 | Saint Petersburg | Estonia | 0 – 0 | ||||
April 18 | Saint Petersburg | Estonia | 0 – 5 | ||||
April 19 | Saint Petersburg | Estonia | 3 – 2 | Koger 14' 34' Frolov 50' | |||
June 7 | Friendly | A. Le Coq Arena 1st grass pitch | Estonia | 0 – 5 |
U-15[]
Date | Comp. | Venue | Home Team | Result | Away Team | Scorers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unofficial match(es) | |||||||
April 17 | Friendly | Kalevi kunstmuruväljak, Tallinn | Estonia | 6 – 1 | Levadia '94 | Kauber 2' (pen.) 6' 16' 17' Ojamaa 29' 50' |
References[]
- ^ "Eesti Jalgpalli Liit. Kasahstan – Eesti 2:0 (1:0)". EJL. Retrieved May 29, 2009.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "FIFA.com. Armenia – Estonia 2:2 (1:1)". FIFA. Archived from the original on April 5, 2009. Retrieved May 29, 2009.
- ^ "FIFA.com. Estonia – Armenia 1:0 (0:0)". FIFA. Archived from the original on April 5, 2009. Retrieved May 29, 2009.
- ^ "Kaheldav penalti tõi Eestile Walesist kaotuse". Soccernet.ee. Archived from the original on 31 May 2009. Retrieved May 29, 2009.
- ^ "Eesti – Ekvatoriaal-Guinea". EJL. Archived from the original on September 12, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2009.
- ^ "Eesti – FC Flora 0:6 (0:1)". EJL. Archived from the original on September 12, 2009. Retrieved June 1, 2009.
External links[]
Categories:
- 2009 in Estonian football
- Seasons in Estonian football