Futebol Feminino Internacional / Selecções 2020/2021

anarcos

The 100 best female footballers in the world 2020: Nos 100-11

Chelsea's Beth England is this year's highest climber, from 89th to 26th, as we reveal Nos 40-11 on our joint list with the Offside Rule Podcast




https://www.theguardian.com/football/ng-interactive/2020/dec/08/the-100-best-female-footballers-in-the-world-2020

anarcos

Mais 4 do Chelsea na lista do The Guardian. E ainda falta o top10.

Já vai em 9:

16ª - Ji So-yun
25ª - Magdalena Eriksson
26ª - Beth England
39ª - Maren Mjelde
46ª - Guro Reiten
60ª - Erin Cuthbert
63ª - Melanie Leupolz
66ª - Millie Bright
67ª - Ann-Katrin Berger


anarcos

The 55 most voted players for the 2020 FIFA FIFPRO Women's World 11

Reigning European Champions Olympique Lyonnais have 10 current players on the List of 55 Players who received most votes for the 2020 FIFA FIFPRO Women's World 11.

Among the ten players from Lyon are six former award winners: Kadeisha Buchanan, Ada Hegerberg, Amandine Henry, Eugenie Le Sommer, Dzsennifer Marozsan and Wendie Renard. The last one is the only player who has been voted onto all four previous World 11s.

Renard's teammates Ellie Carpenter and Delphine Cascarino make their first appearance on the List of 55.



There are 15 new names on the List of 55 including five Chelsea players (Ann-Katrin Berger, Erin Cuthbert, Magdalena Eriksson, Bethany England and So-Yun Ji), USA's Christen Press and Tabitha Chawinga from Malawi, who is the first African player in the history of the List of 55.

Press is one of twelve US players on the List of 55, which also includes former award winners such as Julie Ertz, Ali Krieger, Rose Lavelle, Carli Lloyd, Kelley O'Hara and Megan Rapinoe.

Next Thursday 17 December, FIFA and FIFPRO will announce the World 11 of the 2019/2020 season.

FIFPRO and FIFA invited all professional footballers worldwide to vote for the World 11. We asked them to pick the most outstanding players in the following lines: goalkeepers, defenders, midfielders and forwards.

The goalkeeper, as well as the three defenders, three midfielders and three forwards who received the most votes will be selected for the World 11. The remaining spot in the World 11 will be assigned to the outfield player with the next highest number of votes.



The List of 55 are:

Goalkeepers

Friederike Abt (VfL Wolfsburg, Germany)
Nicole Barnhart (Utah Royals, USA)
Laura Benkarth (FC Bayern Munich, Germany)
Ann-Katrin Berger (Chelsea, Germany)
Sarah Bouhaddi (Olympique Lyonnais, France)
Christiane Endler (Paris Saint-Germain, Chile)
Hedvig Lindahl (Atletico Madrid, Sweden)
Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars, USA)
Sandra Panos (FC Barcelona, Spain)
Sari van Veenendaal (PSV, The Netherlands)

Defenders

Millie Bright (Chelsea, England)
Lucy Bronze (Manchester City, England)
Kadeisha Buchanan (Olympique Lyonnais, Canada)
Ellie Carpenter (Olympique Lyonnais, Australia)
Abby Dahlkemper (North Carolina Courage, USA)
Paulina Dudek (Paris Saint-Germain, Poland)
Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns, USA)
Magdalena Eriksson (Chelsea, Sweden)
Nilla Fischer (Linkoping, Sweden)
Sara Gama (Juventus, Italy)
Stefanie van der Gragt (Ajax, The Netherlands)
Ali Krieger (Orlando Pride, USA)
Saki Kumagai (Olympique Lyonnais, Japan)
Irene Paredes (Paris Saint-Germain, Spain)
Wendie Renard (Olympique Lyonnais, France)

Midfielders

Barbara Bonansea (Juventus, Italy)
Veronica Boquete (AC Milan, Spain)
Delphine Cascarino (Olympique Lyonnais, France)
Shirley Cruz (OL Reign, Costa Rica)
Erin Cuthbert (Chelsea, Scotland)
Danielle van de Donk (Arsenal, The Netherlands)
Julie Ertz (Chicago Red Stars, USA)
Formiga (Paris Saint-Germain, Brazil)
Caroline Graham-Hansen (FC Barcelona, Norway)
Amandine Henry (Olympique Lyonnais, France)
So-Yun Ji (Chelsea, South-Korea)
Rose Lavelle (Manchester City, USA)
Carli Lloyd (Sky Blue, USA)
Dzsenifer Marozsan (Olympique Lyonnais, Germany)
Kelley O'Hara (Utah Royals, USA)

Forwards

Kosovare Asllani (Real Madrid, Sweden)
Stina Blackstenius (Goteborg, Sweden)
Tabitha Chawinga (Jiangsu Suning, Malawi)
Cristiane (Santos, Brazil)
Bethany England (Chelsea, England)
Pernille Harder (Chelsea, Denmark)
Tobin Heath (Manchester United, USA)
Ada Hegerberg (Olympique Lyonnais, Norway)
Jennifer Hermoso (FC Barcelona, Spain)
Samantha Kerr (Chelsea, Australia)
Eugenie Le Sommer (Olympique Lyonnais, France)
Lieke Martens (FC Barcelona, The Netherlands)
Vivianne Miedema (Arsenal, The Netherlands)
Christen Press (Manchester United, USA)
Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign, USA)



Facts and figures

  - We received votes from female footballers in 33 countries.
  - This is the fifth edition of the World 11, the second jointly organised by FIFPRO and FIFA
  - FIFA and FIFPRO changed the structure of the List of 55, which now includes 10 goalkeepers, 15 defenders, 15 midfielders and 15 forwards. Previously, there were 5 goalkeepers and 20 defenders.
  - It is the fourth time FIFPRO created a List of 55 most voted players. 15 players have appeared on all four lists.
  - Three of those players have never received a World 11 award: Jenni Hermoso, Saki Kumagai and Vivianne Miedema.
  - The List of 55 includes 15 new names. Cristiane is the oldest debutant. The Brazilian striker of Santos is 35 years old.
  - The oldest player on the shortlist is Formiga. The Brazilian midfielder of PSG is 42 years old.
  - Last year's FIFA FIFPRO Women's World 11 consisted of Sari van Veenendaal, Lucy Bronze, Nilla Fischer, Kelley O'Hara, Wendie Renard, Julie Ertz, Amandine Henry, Rose Lavelle, Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe, Marta Vieira.
  - Alex Morgan and Marta are the only two World 11 players who are not on this year's List of 55. Morgan gave birth to her daughter in May and only returned to the pitch in November.

https://www.fifpro.org/en/industry/world-11/2020-world-11-the-list-of-55-female-players



anarcos

The 100 best female footballers in the world 2020

Chelsea's Pernille Harder wins the award for the second time in three years after 88 judges had their say on our joint list with the Offside Rule Podcast



https://www.theguardian.com/football/ng-interactive/2020/dec/08/the-100-best-female-footballers-in-the-world-2020

anarcos

Citação de: anarcos em 10 de Dezembro de 2020, 14:36
Mais 4 do Chelsea na lista do The Guardian. E ainda falta o top10.

Já vai em 9:

16ª - Ji So-yun
25ª - Magdalena Eriksson
26ª - Beth England
39ª - Maren Mjelde
46ª - Guro Reiten
60ª - Erin Cuthbert
63ª - Melanie Leupolz
66ª - Millie Bright
67ª - Ann-Katrin Berger

1ª - Pernille Harder
7ª - Sam Kerr

Uma equipa completa.

seqmad

Citação de: anarcos em 11 de Dezembro de 2020, 13:05
Citação de: anarcos em 10 de Dezembro de 2020, 14:36
Mais 4 do Chelsea na lista do The Guardian. E ainda falta o top10.

Já vai em 9:

16ª - Ji So-yun
25ª - Magdalena Eriksson
26ª - Beth England
39ª - Maren Mjelde
46ª - Guro Reiten
60ª - Erin Cuthbert
63ª - Melanie Leupolz
66ª - Millie Bright
67ª - Ann-Katrin Berger

1ª - Pernille Harder
7ª - Sam Kerr

Uma equipa completa.

Até ao 40°:
Lyon 9
CHELSEA 6
Barcelona 6 (maior parte do 20 ao 40)
PSG 5
Arsenal 3
Wolfsburg, Manchester 2

Não jogámos com uma equipa qualquer

anarcos

Pernille Harder crowned best female footballer on planet in turbulent year

Chelsea's Danish forward beats Arsenal's Vivianne Miedema into second with Lucy Bronze completing a WSL top three


Cheslea's Pernille Harder (right) celebrates scoring her side's fourth goal against Everton.

I started last year's piece by saying 2019 had been a momentous year for the women's game and in reality, nobody could have foreseen the bumps in the road this year would bring off the back of the global success of the 2019 Women's World Cup.

Women's football, though, as so many times before, overcame adversity to restart after the enforced Covid-19 break and is now raring to go in 2021.

The football may have been stopped for several months but there was enough action before and after to be able to run our top 100 female footballers of the world in 2020 and I am delighted we did so.

We have a new winner, Pernille Harder dethroning Sam Kerr to become the first player to have won the award twice. The Dane came in almost 150 points clear of Arsenal's Vivianne Miedema, who moved into the top three for the first time.

Harder moves up from an eighth-place finish in 2019 to regain the No 1 spot, with the top three positions held by Women's Super League players. Harder, who started the year with Wolfsburg but moved to Chelsea in the summer, and Miedema are followed by Manchester City's Lucy Bronze in third.

Harder won with 3,051 points, with 29 of our 88 judges voting her the best player on the planet, with 22 selecting Miedema as their top pick. The main challengers to the top three came from the European champions, Lyon, with Wendie Renard coming home in fourth, her highest ranking, followed by Amandine Henry and Dzsenifer Marozsán, the latter returning to the top 10. Last year's winner Kerr dropped to seventh.



Chicago Red Stars' Julie Ertz was the top USA player in ninth and some of her international teammates, such as Sam Mewis, Lindsey Horan and Crystal Dunn, also ranked highly – but it was a year in which many of them struggled to find regular game time, with the usual full NWSL season not able to take place because of the pandemic.

There were some tough decisions to be made this year off the back of such a hole in the women's football calendar, with Europe less affected in the timescale of games we take into account when judging the top 100. Harder, though, is a deserved winner. The Denmark international ended last season's Bundesliga as by far and away the top scorer in the league, helping Wolfsburg to secure another league title and a Champions League final.

Harder joined Chelsea in the summer and it will be exciting to see how she develops in 2021 with a new team in pursuit of finally getting hold of Europe's biggest club trophy.



As I said last year, people will debate the list in both positive and negative ways and it is great to see that year on year people look forward to the publication of this list and at least appreciate the effort that goes into it.

It cannot be perfect and this year more than ever I know some of our judges struggled with the fact some players played so little football throughout 2020. While major tournaments are becoming more visible, the reality is many domestic leagues remain largely invisible unless you are based in that country.

That led to a lot of top talents and players who ranked highly in previous editions being left out of the top 100 this year, but it deservedly paved the way for some exciting young talents who probably would not have made the list otherwise.

It was really pleasing to see the likes of Germany's Klara Bühl and Sydney Lohmann, as well as some of the best talents from the top division in Sweden, Damallsvenskan, including Anna Anvegård and Natalia Kuikka, the latter of whom will join Portland Thorns next year, and of course England's Chloe Kelly for the first time.



Many players deservedly shot up the rankings. The England and Chelsea forward Beth England was the biggest mover, going from 89th to 26th, a difference of 63 from 2019. Marie-Antoinette Katoto made the top 20 after finishing in 75th last year, while there were also big moves up the list for Magdalena Eriksson, Kadidiatou Diani, Alexia Putellas, Mapi León and Rachel Daly among others, and it was good to see players gaining more recognition for their performances even in a year where women's football was possibly less visible than in recent years.

Lena Oberdorf and Formiga once again listed as the youngest and oldest players respectively, while the likes of Kristie Mewis and Shea Groom gain recognition for their part in Houston Dash's Challenge Cup success.

I should spare a mention too for the unlucky few who finished just outside the top 100, with PSG's Paulina Dudek 101st, Zambia's exciting young forward Barbra Banda in 103rd and Germany's Kathrin Hendrich in between.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2020/dec/11/pernille-harder-crowned-best-female-footballer-on-planet-in-turbulent-year

anarcos

Finalists announced for The Best FIFA Football Awards™ 2020



  - FIFA announces the final nominees for The Best FIFA Football Awards™ 2020
  - Winners to be crowned on 17 December
  - Virtual ceremony to be broadcast live from the Home of FIFA in Zurich

The finalists for The Best FIFA Football Awards™ 2020, world football's premium awards event, were announced today during an online media event with FIFA Legends Hope Powell, Christie Pearce Rampone, Gilberto Silva and Pablo Aimar.

The shortlisted candidates for The Best FIFA Football Awards™ 2020 are (in alphabetical order):

The Best FIFA Women's Player:

  - Lucy Bronze (England / Olympique Lyonnais / Manchester City WFC)
  - Pernille Harder (Denmark / VfL Wolfsburg / Chelsea FC Women)
  - Wendie Renard (France / Olympique Lyonnais)

[...]

The Best FIFA Women's Goalkeeper

  - Sarah Bouhaddi (France / Olympique Lyonnais)
  - Christiane Endler (Chile / Paris Saint-Germain)
  - Alyssa Naeher (USA / Chicago Red Stars)

[...]

The Best FIFA Women's Coach:

  - Emma Hayes (England / Chelsea FC Women)
  - Jean-Luc Vasseur (France / Olympique Lyonnais)
  - Sarina Wiegman (Netherlands / Dutch national team)

[...]

All winners, including those of the FIFA Fan Award and the FIFA Fair Play Award, will be crowned on 17 December 2020 in a TV show broadcast live.

To keep up with the latest news about The Best FIFA Football Awards™, visit FIFA.com, The Best FIFA Football Awards™ official Facebook page and FIFA on YouTube.

Join the discussion about who should win this year's awards by using the hashtag #TheBest.

https://www.fifa.com/the-best-fifa-football-awards/news/finalists-announced-for-the-best-fifa-football-awardstm-2020


anarcos



Em 10 minutos, Corinthians vira e vence primeira partida da final do Paulistão feminino

Atletas do Timão sofreram no primeiro tempo e até os 40 do segundo, mas Victória muda a cara do jogo com dois gols

https://globoesporte.globo.com/futebol/futebol-feminino/jogo/13-12-2020/corinthians-ferroviaria-1.ghtml

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwBNogQeMNg

anarcos

A "nossa" Daiane titular no meio-campo da Ferroviária.