Futebol Feminino Internacional / Selecções 2020/2021

nelsonandre

Penso que terá passado despercebido.
Estes 350 000eur são a maior transferência de sempre do futebol feminino mundial.
Só para terem uma ideia dos valores entre o masculino e o feminino...

Citação de: anarcos em 01 de Setembro de 2020, 19:58


anarcos

WSL now counts on top talent to deliver after hectic summer of recruitment

Anticipation is high for the new season after English clubs signed some of the biggest talents in the world game


Sam Mewis shook the league when she joined Manchester City

Trying to keep pace with player transfers this summer has felt like a round-the-clock challenge. Such has been the surge in marquee deals in the Women's Super League, that to move away from Twitter for anything more than a couple of hours would risk missing another major unveiling.

It could not be better news, after a painful six months of women's sport waiting in the wings. Finally, the excitement is building. We are yet to see a ball kicked in the top division, even so the clubs have been making headlines as the conveyer belt of glittering additions to squads kept rolling.

After nearing 200 days without WSL action, the transfers have kept existing supporters of the game waiting on tenterhooks – while also attracting the attention of the world. Players' names were trending online and brought exposure to the league that many worried would drop off the face of the Earth with such a gap in competitive play. The anticipation feels higher than ever, for what is being dubbed as potentially the best season in the English league's history.

Sport is so often about storytelling after all, and in this summer's chapter – only a prelude to the main event – it finally felt like players were being marketed as the great protagonists and assets to the game that they are. Such work began with the World Cup last year, with the likes of Lucy Bronze and Megan Rapinoe gaining worldwide recognition in the international game. Then Chelsea signing Sam Kerr wheeled into Heathrow with her loaded suitcase trolley during last season's winter transfer window, the deal that broke the dam for the WSL.

A flood of potential superstars have now enriched the league further.


Man City's signing of Rose Lavelle is a significant coup for them but also for the WSL

In July, Chelsea stalwart Anita Asante's move to WSL debutants Aston Villa kicked off proceedings, while Australia's Ella Mastrantonio joined Bristol City later that month. But in August the market really took off as internationals made their way to England in droves.

France's Valerie Gauvin joined Everton on Aug 6; four days later Sam Mewis of the United States shook the league when she joined Manchester City; just over a week later her team-mate Rose Lavelle followed; the next day Wales and OL Reign's Jess Fishlock moved to Reading on loan.

American pair Lavelle and Mewis are a huge coup for City, as two of the most high-profile talents in the 2019 World Cup-winning squad. They could give the club the edge in midfield needed to challenge Chelsea, who bettered them last season by a 0.1 point margin in a points-per-game system.

"I'm just so excited to see all this top talent come to the UK," Emma Hayes said ahead of her Chelsea team's win over City in the Community Shield last weekend. "This is what I wanted for the league. This is, for me, a dream scenario."

Behind her smile was the knowledge her side had made a late swoop for Wolfsburg and Denmark goal machine Pernille Harder, announced earlier this week. Harder is a record signing in women's football – Chelsea reportedly paid more than £250,000 for her – and will be an invaluable asset to the west London club, who are already rich in talent up front with the likes of Kerr, Beth England, Fran Kirby and Erin Cuthbert.

At Arsenal, a former Wolfsburg team-mate of Harder's, Noelle Maritz, has already made an impact in her first match for the Gunners, in their Champions League quarter-final last month. Australia's Steph Catley and Lydia Williams also joined compatriot Caitlin Foord to add to Joe Montemurro's international squad.

Even mid-table, we have witnessed international players joining in their hordes to get in on the action. England's Rachel Daly – the NWSL Challenge Cup's most valuable player – became the latest on Thursday, in her surprise move to West Ham on a four-month loan.

A flurry of further signings could still be to come. The Telegraph first reported in June that Lyon and England pair Lucy Bronze and Alex Greenwood are expected to join Gareth Taylor's Manchester City squad, and they should be announced ahead of the Sept 10 deadline. Bronze became the first England player of any gender to win the Champions League three times in a row last Sunday, but has long expressed her desire to come back to the WSL and repeat that success with an English side. Now, as the world's best are upping sticks and moving to England, seems as good a time as any.

The pendulum seems to have firmly swung away from European powerhouse Lyon, as players are looking to challenge at top WSL sides. The English league was arguably already the most competitive in Europe already – the four points that separated the top three at last season's premature end evidence of that. It has been boosted to three Champions League spots for next season too. A string of opening fortnight matches are due to be broadcast on BT Sport and the BBC, and this week the Football Association announced a major broadcast deal with NBC in the US, such is the appetite there for the English game.

Of course, the question now is whether the talent will deliver. The good news regardless is that the world is watching.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2020/09/04/wsl-now-counts-top-talent-deliver-hectic-summer-recruitment/


TeamRocket37

Aston Villa FC: Diana Silva
BV Borussia Bocholt: Ana Leite
Famalicão FC: Rute Costa
Ferencvaros TC: Vanessa Marques
Fiorentina: Cláudia Neto
SC Braga: Diana Gomes, Dolores Silva, Andreia Norton
SC Heerenveen: Francisca Cardoso
SL Benfica: Sílvia Rebelo, Carole Costa, Andreia Faria, Ana Seiça, Matilde Fidalgo
Sporting CP: Ana Borges, Tatiana Pinto, Fátima Pinto, Andreia Jacinto, Inês Pereira, Patrícia Morais, Mónica Mendes, Alicia Correia, Ana Capeta
Stade de Reims: Melissa Gomes

JMiguel23

O lugar de defesa esquerdo é tão fraco que é preciso convocar uma jogadora de 17 anos (que até gosto) sem nenhum jogo oficial pela equipa principal do Sporting

Gradinni

Citação de: JMiguel23 em 07 de Setembro de 2020, 16:47
O lugar de defesa esquerdo é tão fraco que é preciso convocar uma jogadora de 17 anos (que até gosto) sem nenhum jogo oficial pela equipa principal do Sporting
O menino especial da turma perdeu 2 jogadoras selecionáveis, entao é preciso manter as 9 do costume, nem que para isso se va buscar uma miuda de 17 anos que nunca jogou na A

anarcos

Marchão e Ágata? Taizonde?

Ana Leite em 2020, vinda da 2ª alemã? A sério? Para jogar a DD?

Mónica Mendes? Zero (0) minutos em 2019/20 (e sem estar lesionada)?

Rute Costa, que esteve de "castigo" a época quase toda? A Bárbara Santos já não serve?

Andreia Jacinto (de quem gosto muito, note-se)? Promovida a sénior em 2019 no Lisbon, para a Cova lhe dar 1 (um) minuto durante toda a época?

:rir: :rir: :rir:

anarcos

Eleitas para estágio na Cidade do Futebol

Futebol Fem. - Seleção A

Francisco Neto chamou 24 jogadoras e promoveu uma estreia. Equipa das Quinas vai preparar a retoma da qualificação para o Europeu.

Francisco Neto divulgou, esta segunda-feira, a convocatória para o próximo estágio de preparação da Seleção Nacional feminina A, que irá decorrer na Cidade do Futebol, entre 11 e 20 de setembro. É a primeira concentração da equipa, depois da paragem forçada pela pandemia de COVID-19

A defesa Alicia Correia, de 17 anos, que representa a equipa do Sporting CP, é estreante absoluta na convocatória. Destaque, também, para a chamada da central de 19 anos Ana Seiça, do SL Benfica, que integrou os últimos estágios de observação da Equipa das Quinas, para jogadoras sub-23. 

O estágio prevê a realização de treze treinos, incluindo dois jogos-treino, nos relvados da Cidade do Futebol. Todas as sessões serão realizadas à porta fechada.

A armada lusa, recorde-se, retoma em outubro a qualificação** para o próximo Campeonato da Europa feminino, com dois jogos frente ao Chipre, fora e em casa.

A fase final do Europeu, inicialmente marcada para o verão de 2021, passou para julho de 2022, mantendo-se a Inglaterra como anfitriã. Portugal encontra-se na terceira posição do Grupo E de qualificação, com quatro pontos, atrás da Escócia, que tem seis, e da líder Finlândia, com dez pontos e mais dois encontros disputados.

Apuram-se para a fase final os vencedores de cada grupo mais os três segundos classificados com melhores resultados face ao primeiro, terceiro, quarto e quinto no seu grupo. Os restantes segundos vão disputar um "play-off" em data a definir, para assegurar as últimas três vagas na fase final.

Eis a lista completa de convocadas:
Aston Villa FC: Diana Silva
BV Borussia Bocholt: Ana Leite
Famalicão FC: Rute Costa
Ferencvaros TC: Vanessa Marques
Fiorentina: Cláudia Neto
SC Braga: Diana Gomes, Dolores Silva, Andreia Norton
SC Heerenveen: Francisca Cardoso
SL Benfica: Sílvia Rebelo, Carole Costa, Andreia Faria, Ana Seiça, Matilde Fidalgo
Sporting CP: Ana Borges, Tatiana Pinto, Fátima Pinto, Andreia Jacinto, Inês Pereira, Patrícia Morais, Mónica Mendes, Alicia Correia, Ana Capeta
Stade de Reims: Melissa Gomes

Programa de atividades da Seleção Nacional:

11.09.2020 | sexta-feira
21h30 Concentração na Cidade do Futebol

12.09.2020 | sábado
10h45 Treino
17h30 Treino

13.09.2020| domingo
10h30 Treino

14.09.2020 | segunda-feira
10h30 Treino
17h30 Treino

15.09.2020 | terça-feira
10h30 Treino
17h30 Treino

16.09.2020 | quarta-feira
17h00 Jogo-treino

17.09.2020 | quinta-feira
10h30 Treino

18.09.2020 | sexta-feira
10h30 Treino
17h30 Treino

19.09.2020 | sábado
17h00 Jogo-treino

20.09.2020 | domingo
10h30 Treino
16h00 Regresso aos clubes

**Calendário da qualificação para o Euro feminino está sujeito a alterações em função da evolução da pandemia de COVID-19 e dos interesses das seleções nacionais.

https://www.fpf.pt/News/Todas-as-not%C3%ADcias/Not%C3%ADcia/news/27315







anarcos

FIFA launches programme to help member associations further develop women's football



  - FIFA is offering eight new women's football development programmes for the 2020‑2023 period
  - All FIFA member associations are eligible to apply now for these programmes
  - Programmes aim to provide member associations with access to additional tailored expertise and support to develop women's football

FIFA has launched a programme for member associations (MAs) to further develop women's football on a sustainable basis whilst simultaneously pushing it forward into the mainstream.

In line with FIFA's Women's Football Strategy, the FIFA Women's Development Programme aims to provide all 211 member associations with the opportunity to apply for and access additional resources and specialist expertise to develop women's football at a national level.

Member associations will be able to apply for support across eight key areas of women's football development during the 2020-2023 period. In addition to financial assistance to cover the costs in selected programmes, the FIFA Women's Development Programme will also provide MAs with access to women's football experts, additional equipment and technical support within FIFA in order to develop women's football in their country.

The FIFA Women's Development Programme underlines FIFA's commitment to supporting MAs in developing the women's game and builds upon the solid foundations laid by the FIFA Forward Programme. It also follows the recent announcement of an additional USD 500,000 grant per MA as part of the COVID-19 Relief Plan that will be specifically allocated to women's football.

The FIFA Women's Development Programme includes the following projects:

  - Women's Football Strategy
  - Women's Football Campaign
  - League Development
  - Club Licensing
  - Capacity-Building for Administrators
  - Coach Education Scholarships
  - Coach Mentorship
  - Women in Football Leadership

For further information about the FIFA Women's Development Programme and to access the application forms, please click HERE.

Fatma Samoura, FIFA Secretary General, said: "FIFA's commitment to supporting our member associations in developing women's football remains one of our top priorities. In addition to the funding currently available via the COVID-19 Women's Football Grant and the FIFA Forward Programme, the FIFA Women's Football Development Programme will provide more support and assistance to member associations so that they can invest in the women's game at all levels."

Sarai Bareman, FIFA Chief Women's Football Officer, added: "The top-class football and billion-plus television viewers of last year's FIFA Women's World Cup 2019 in France showed just how far the women's game has come. Our goal is to bring it ever more into the mainstream and working hand in hand with our MAs will allow us to do this and make women's football accessible to everybody."

Women's football is a key priority for FIFA, which set up a dedicated Women's Football Division in 2016, presented its first Women's Football Strategy two years later and is now doubling its investment across a range of areas in the women's game.

This investment will be distributed across a range of areas in the women's game including competitions, capacity-building, governance and leadership, professionalisation and technical development. The new programmes represent the next phase of this development.

Member associations can apply for any of these FIFA programmes, provided that they meet the requirements and fit in with their national women's football development strategy.

https://www.fifa.com/news/fifa-launches-programme-to-help-member-associations-further-develop-women-s-foot