The 2004 season was the 99th season of competitive football in Norway.

Men's football

League season

Tippeligaen

1. divisjon

2. divisjon

Group 1
Group 2
Group 3
Group 4

3. divisjon

Norwegian Cup

Bracket

Final

Women's football

League season

Toppserien

1. divisjon

Norwegian Women's Cup

Final

  • Røa 2–1 Asker

Men's UEFA competitions

Norwegian representatives:

  • Rosenborg (UEFA Champions League)
  • Bodø/Glimt (UEFA Cup, Norwegian Cup runners-up)
  • Stabæk (UEFA Cup)
  • Odd Grenland (UEFA Cup)

Champions League

Qualifying rounds

Second qualifying round

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Third qualifying round

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Group stage

Group E

Matches

  • 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

Second qualifying round

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First round

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Intertoto Cup

No Norwegian representative this season.

UEFA Women's Cup

Norwegian Representatives

  • Trondheims/Ørn (UEFA Cup)

Second qualifying round

Group 4

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

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Semi-finals

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National team

Norway men's national football team

{|

!style="background: lightblue;"|Date

!style="background: lightblue;"|Venue

!style="background: lightblue;"|Opponent

!style="background: lightblue;" align=center|Res.<nowiki>*</nowiki>

!style="background: lightblue;" align=center|Competition

!style="background: lightblue;"|Norwegian goalscorers

|-

|January 22

|Hong Kong

|

|3–0

|Friendly

|Frode Johnsen, Håvard Flo (2)

|-

|January 25

|Hong Kong

|

|3–1

|Friendly

|Harald Martin Brattbakk, Frode Johnsen, Magne Hoseth

|-

|January 28

|Singapore

|

|5–2

|Friendly

|Anders Stadheim, Alexander Aas, Håvard Flo (2), Harald Martin Brattbakk

|-

|February 18

|Belfast

|

|4–1

|Friendly

|Morten Gamst Pedersen (2), Steffen Iversen, Own Goal

|-

|March 31

|Beograd

|

|1–0

|Friendly

|Martin Andresen

|-

|April 28

|Oslo

|

|3–2

|Friendly

|Martin Andresen, Sigurd Rushfeldt, Jan Gunnar Solli

|-

|May 27

|Oslo

|

|0–0

|Friendly

|

|-

|August 18

|Oslo

|

|2–2

|Friendly

|Frode Johnsen, Vidar Riseth

|-

|September 4

|Palermo

|

|1–2

|WCQ

|John Carew

|-

|September 8

|Oslo

|

|1–1

|WCQ

|Vidar Riseth

|-

|October 9

|Glasgow

|

|1–0

|WCQ

|Steffen Iversen

|-

|October 13

|Oslo

|

|3–0

|WCQ

|John Carew, Morten Gamst Pedersen, Alexander Ødegaard

|-

|November 16

|London

|

|2–2

|Friendly

|Steffen Iversen, Morten Gamst Pedersen

|}

Note: Norway's goals first <br>

Explanation:

  • WCQ = FIFA World Cup 2006 Qualifier

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

References