London and South East Women's Regional Football League

The London and South East Women's Regional Football League is at the fifth level of the English women's football pyramid, with the seven other Regional Leagues – Eastern, Southern, South West, West Mids, East Mids, North East and North West. The London and South East Women's Regional Football League feeds directly into the FA Women's National League Division One South East, and lies above the Greater London Women's Football League and South East Counties Women's League in the pyramid. The pyramid structure was founded in 1998.

London and South East Women's Regional Football League
Founded2005
Country England
Divisions3
Number of teams32
Level on pyramid5-6
Promotion toFA Women's National League Division 1 South East
Relegation to
Current championsWorthing
(2022–23)
WebsiteOfficial website

History edit

The London and South East Regional Women's Football League was established in 2005 and consisted of just one division, Premier Division. The league expanded to include Division 1 North and South leagues, which sit at the six tier, which started for the 2020–21 division.

Teams edit

 
 
AFC Acorns
 
Aylesford
 
Dartford
 
Dulwich Hamlet
 
Ebbsfleet United
 
Enfield Town
 
Fulham
 
Millwall Lionesses
 
New London Lionesses
 
Saltdean United
 
Sutton United
 
Worthing
 
Brentford
 
Clapham United
 
Denham United
 
Dorking Wanderers
 
Dulwich Hamlet Reserves
 
Hackney
 
Leatherhead
 
Richmond Park
 
Sport London E Benfica
 
Watford Development
 
Whyteleafe
 
Ashford United
 
Bexhill United
 
Bromley
 
Cray Valley (PM)
 
Eastbourne United Association
 
Hastings United
 
Herne Bay
 
Maidstone United
 
Montpelier Villa
 
Newhaven
 
Steyning Town Community
 
Welling United
Map showing the locations of the teams in the London and South East Women's Regional Football League
  – Premier Division   - Division 1 North   - Division 1 South

The teams competing in the London and South East Women's Regional League during the 2023–24 season are:[1]

Premier Division

Club Home ground Capacity
Ashford United The Homelands 3,200
Aylesford Aylesford Recreation Ground 1,000
Crawley AFC The New Defence 1,800
Dartford Princes Park 4,100
Dorking Wanderers Meadowbank 2,000
Dulwich Hamlet Champion Hill 3,000
Ebbsfleet United Stonebridge Road 5,011
Enfield Town Queen Elizabeth II Stadium 2,500
Fulham Motspur Park 2,000
Millwall Lionesses St. Paul's Sports Stadium 1,000
Saltdean United Hill Park 1,000
Sutton United Gander Green Lane 7,032

Division One North

Club Home ground Capacity
Actonians Reserves Gunnersbury Park
Ashmount Leigh
Brentford Bedfont Recreation Ground 3,000
Camden and Islington United Market Road
Clapton Community The Old Spotted Dog Ground 1,000
Denham United The Den 1,500
Dulwich Hamlet Reserves The Edward Alleyn Club 1,000
Hackney Hackney Marshes 1,000
Hounslow Tithe Farm 3,000
Richmond Park The Beveree Stadium 3,500
Sport London E Benfica Rectory Park 500
Whyteleafe Church Road 2,000

Division One South

Club Home ground Capacity
Bexhill United Bexhill College Sports Centre
Bognor Regis Town MKM Arena 4,500
Bromley Hayes Lane 6,000
Dartford Reserves Princes Park 4,100
Eastbourne United The Oval 1,200
Hassocks The Beacon
Hastings United The Pilot Field 4,050
Herne Bay Winch's Field 3,000
Montpelier Villa Culver Road 2,000
Newhaven Fort Road 1,000
Steyning Town Community The Shooting Field 2,000
Welling United Park View Road 4,500

Champions edit

2005–2020 edit

Season Champions
2005–2006 Whitehawk
2006–2007 Lewes
2007–2008 Tottenham Hotspur
2008–2009 Ebbsfleet United
2009–2010 Old Actonians
2010–2011 Tooting & Mitcham
2011–2012 Chichester City
2012–2013 Denham United
2013–2014 Crystal Palace
2014–2015 Old Actonians
2015–2016 AFC Wimbledon
2016–2017 Leyton Orient
2017–2018 Crawley Wasps
2018–2019 Kent Football United
2019–2020 League abandoned

2020–Present edit

The league expanded to include new Division 1 North and Division South.

Season Premier Division 1 North Division 1 South
2020–2021 Season abandoned
2021–2022 Ashford Town (Middlesex) Sutton United AFC Acorns
2022–2023 Worthing Dorking Wanderers Ashford United F.C.

References edit

  1. ^ "London & South East Regional Women's". The FA Full-Time League Websites. The FA. Retrieved 24 October 2022.

External links edit