Futebol Feminino Internacional / Selecções 2020/2021

anarcos

#900
[Continuação do post anterior.]

The next 11 (in alphabetical order)

Vicki Becho, FW
Club: Lyon
Country: France
Age: 17

Another member of the France side that won the 2019 U-19 Women's Championship, Becho's achievement was all the more impressive in that she was just 15 and played a crucial role in the tournament win. Her goal in the semifinal made her the youngest player to score since Hegerberg did the same for Norway eight years prior.

She appeared on the bench several times for Paris Saint-Germain but made the controversial decision to join Division 1 Feminine competitors Lyon for her first professional contract in 2020. After joining on the cusp of the COVID-19 pandemic, she hasn't had the opportunity to take full advantage of the move but has impressed in her substitute appearances.

Hanna Bennison, MID
Club: FC Rosengard
Country: Sweden
Age: 18

Bennison's senior debut for Sweden in November 2019 couldn't have come against bigger opposition: the USWNT. Despite losing 3-2, her performance caught the attention of the legendary Aly Wagner who called her "something special." The hype around Bennison had been clear to many in Sweden but this international appearance brought her to the world stage. She made her debut with Rosengard as a 15-year-old in 2018 and by the 2019 season had worked her way up to starting 16 of the club's 18 league games. Between injuries and COVID-19 it has been hard for her to hit similar heights over the last two seasons but she's undoubtedly one to watch.

Niamh Charles, DEF
Club: Chelsea
Country: England
Age: 21

Charles started her career as more attack-minded player, but Chelsea boss Hayes has used her as a right-back. In one season she has won the WSL and the Continental Cup, reached a Champions League final, gained a senior England call-up and could yet make it a domestic Treble with the FA Cup yet to be decided. Charles' partnership with Jess Carter became of particular focus after the injury to Maren Mjelde and while the youngsters struggled against Barcelona's dynamic wingers in the UWCL, they showed plenty of promise in games prior.

Melchie Dumornay, MID
Club: AS Tigresses
Country: Haiti
Age: 17

In April, after a delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Dumornay finally received the Golden Boot she won at the 2020 CONCACAF U-20 Championship. Over six games last year, the then-16-year-old scored 14 goals for Haiti and led them to the semifinals. Winning individual awards are nothing new to her: In 2018, she picked up the Golden Ball at the CONCACAF U-17 Women's Championship. Teams like Lyon have the 17-year-old on their radar and a move to Europe seems on the cards, whether it is to France or elsewhere.

Mary Fowler, FW
Club: Montpellier
Country: Australia
Age: 18

Much has been made of the likes of Kerr, Carpenter and Caitlin Foord's success in Europe but there has been another player who has largely flown under the radar. Fowler, who went to the 2019 World Cup at 16, joined Montpellier in 2020 after undergoing a trial with several top teams across Europe. She earned praise for her range of attacking abilities and while she still has some maturing to do -- she was at fault for Netherlands' first goal in their destruction of Australia in April -- she has shown that her attacking prowess could make her as dangerous a striker as fellow Matilda and five-time Golden Boot winner (across three continents) Kerr.

Ivana Fuso, MID
Club: Manchester United
Country: Brazil
Age: 20

You know it's time to pay attention to a player when powerhouses Germany and Brazil are fighting over them for international allegiance. Born in Brazil but raised in Germany, Fuso captained the Germany U-19 side but made her debut senior appearance for Brazil at this year's SheBelieves Cup against Argentina.

Her first season in the WSL hasn't gone as smoothly as she'd have hoped, with injury hampering her appearances, but several top coaches have been highly complimentary of her abilities, with Brazil coach Pia Sundhage saying she "has a big chance to play a lot of minutes" should she opt for the South American side. Known for her quick feet, Fuso also impresses in one-on-one situations and working herself into attacking positions.

Hannah Hampton, GK
Club: Birmingham City
Country: England
Age: 20

It hasn't been the easiest year for the Birmingham City goalkeeper. Caught in a relegation battle with her club, Hampton found out via email moments before a game against Everton on March 11 that she hadn't made Great Britain's Olympic squad and went on to lose it 4-0. It was a poor move from the FA who apologised over the timing as they didn't do one of England's most promising goalkeeper's justice. The fact Hampton has caught attention is more impressive for the fact that she has no depth perception after a number of eye surgeries when she was younger. "I can't really judge distances and it gets very noticeable when I'm so tired," she told The Athletic. "My left eye will just start wandering."

Phil Neville asked Hampton to join the 2020 SheBelives squad as a training player to continue her development and while the Olympics didn't happen this time, she continues to represent England at U-21 level.

Maya Le Tissier, DEF
Club: Brighton & Hove Albion
Country: England
Age: 19

After arriving in Brighton aged 15, Le Tissier made her debut for the senior side at 16 and quickly became a regular centre-back. During the 2020-21 season, former England coach Hope Powell had Le Tissier as her first choice right-back. The 19-year-old has ideas of replacing Lucy Bronze as England's star defender as well as captaining her country to World Cups and European Championships. She made her U-19 debut in March 2020 but working closely with Powell -- who has said Le Tissier's athleticism and fitness gives her an edge -- she has the potential to be called up to the Lionesses soon.

Esme Morgan, DEF
Club: Manchester City
Country: England
Age: 20

Morgan may have thought she would be spending a lot of time on the bench when she returned to Manchester City from a loan at Everton this season to see star signings like Lucy Bronze, Alex Greenwood and Abby Dahlkemper in the squad. However, Morgan impressed Gareth Taylor and secured herself 24 appearances over the season as well as an England senior call up. "Players like that are worth their weight in gold. She's got a big future in the game," Taylor said of her after she scored her first City goal in May. Morgan, who captained England at the U-19 European Championship in 2019, was called up to Hege Riise's side for the April internationals against France and Canada.

Brianna Pinto, MID
Club: North Carolina
Country: United States
Age: 21

In 2018, when the United States were making a bid to host the 2026 World Cup alongside Mexico and Canada, they sent a trio of players to represent who would be the next generation. Male stars Alphonso Davies (Canada) and Diego Lainez (Mexico) were chosen alongside the 18-year-old Pinto to represent the U.S. It is perhaps a testament to the strength and notoriety of the USWNT that Pinto was chosen above a USMNT player but it was also a mark of who U.S. Soccer were trusting with the future of the game.

Pinto was picked third overall in the 2021 NWSL draft and was recently announced as a Hermann Trophy finalist. Interestingly, Pinto opted to stay with North Carolina's Tar Heels rather than starting her pro-career straight away in the hope of securing their first NCAA championship since 2012.

Ella Toone, FW
Club: Manchester United
Country: England
Age: 21

Manchester United's Toone has had an explosive second season in the WSL. She was the club's joint-leading appearance maker, leading assist provider and leading goal scorer while she also overtook James as the top goal scorer of all time with 32 in 74 appearances (the team was only formed in 2018.)

With such a high number of games under her belt, Toone has been integral to United's ascent through the Championship and then up the WSL. In September, then-manager Phil Neville called her up to the England squad, a show of faith she repaid by scoring on her debut against Northern Ireland. She's gone on to get one more cap but she might add to that this summer in Tokyo.

https://www.espn.com/soccer/blog-espn-fc-united/story/4381107/macariohuitemarodman-among-the-21-best-female-players-age-21-or-under

TeamRocket37

Convocados:

Famalicão: Rute Costa e Mariana Azevedo

Kansas City: Jéssica Silva

Marítimo: Telma Encarnação e Bárbara Santos

SC Braga: Diana Gomes, Dolores Silva e Andreia Norton

Benfica: Sílvia Rebelo, Carole Costa, Andreia Faria, Kika Nazareth, Catarina Amado, Beatriz Cameirão e Lúcia Alves

Sporting: Tatiana Pinto, Fátima Pinto, Joana Marchão, Andreia Jacinto, Alícia Correia, Inês Pereira e Diana Silva

Stade de Reims: Mélissa Gomes

paalexg

Com a possível debandada no Sporting, na próxima convocatória já seremos o clube mais representado. Para desespero do Neto e da FPF, quiçá...

Limentaen

Citação de: paalexg em 27 de Maio de 2021, 18:42
Com a possível debandada no Sporting, na próxima convocatória já seremos o clube mais representado. Para desespero do Neto e da FPF, quiçá...

A equipa B do sporting tem jogadoras para preencher a quota

RED_SHARK38

Com o devido respeito pelas atletas em questão, a equipa da FPF merece a mesma atenção de que as conferências de imprensa do pastilhas lagarto fajuto!
Ao contrário do que tentam divulgar por todos os cantos, o desenvolvimento do Futebol Feminino passará sempre por uma competição digna e o mais competitiva possível.
PRIMEIRO OS CLUBES E DEPOIS A SELECÇÃO NACIONAL!
Enquanto não houver coragem de limpar as equipas que estão a mais e os agentes desportivos que estão a mais, vamos andar a viver no faz de conta.
Que me importa se um conjunto de atletas joguem x minutos contra os EUA se depois irão durante um ano a pasmaçar contra os fófós e os tótós???
Acham que o upgrade competitivo que este tipo de jogo dá, se aproveita enchendo numa garrafinha para depois ir bebendo durante o ano???
Vamos é ver se depois esta treta de convocatórias se vira contra nós, como aparentemente se pode ter virado contra as lagartas no final do campeonato...


anarcos

#906
Copa de la Reina de Fútbol (Taça de Espanha - 1/2 finais)

Madrid CFF 0 - 4 Barcelona

At. Madrid 0 - 1 Levante

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMEM6H3BuSo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-9-28stZ-4

Final (30 de Maio): Barcelona - Levante.



anarcos

Convocadas para jogos nos EUA

Futebol Fem. - Seleção A

Equipa das Quinas encerra a temporada frente às Campeãs Mundiais e a seleção da Nigéria.

Francisco Neto anunciou, esta quinta-feira, a convocatória para os últimos jogos da Seleção Nacional Feminina A na temporada 2020/21.

Portugal vai defrontar a seleção dos Estados Unidos, atual Campeã do Mundo, no dia 10 de junho [19h38 locais, mais seis horas em Lisboa], no Estádio BBVA Compass, em Houston, Texas. Segue-se um encontro com a Nigéria três dias depois, a 13 de junho, às 18h15 locais, no mesmo estádio.

Esta dupla jornada servirá para a Equipa das Quinas preparar a qualificação para o Campeonato do Mundo de 2023. Em setembro, Portugal começará a lutar com as seleções de Alemanha, Sérvia, Turquia, Israel e Bulgária pela presença no próximo Mundial, cuja fase final terá lugar em Austrália e Nova Zelândia.

Na lista de 23 jogadoras divulgada pelo Selecionador Nacional, o destaque recai na chamada de Lúcia Alves e Beatriz Cameirão, jogadoras do SL Benfica que apenas integraram estágios da Seleção Feminina B de Portugal. Destaque, também, para o regresso da guarda-redes Bárbara Santos e da avançada Mélissa Gomes. 

A comitiva nacional concentra-se no dia 6 de junho, no Hotel TRYP Aeroporto, e viaja para Houston às 05h00 do dia 7, com escala em Amsterdão. A chegada a solo norte-americano está prevista para as 13h10 locais (mais seis horas em Portugal continental).

Eis a lista completa de convocadas:



Décimo encontro entre portuguesas e norte-americanas

Portugal defrontou a poderosa seleção norte-americana em nove ocasiões, tendo saído desses confrontos sempre em desvantagem. O último embate entre as duas seleções aconteceu a 3 de setembro de 2019, em solo norte-americano, com os EUA a baterem Portugal por 3-0, num jogo em que Carli Lloyd bisou e Lindsey Horan também marcou.

As internacionais portuguesas nunca mediram forças com a Nigéria, adversária que vão encontrar a 13 de junho.

https://www.fpf.pt/pt/News/Todas-as-not%C3%ADcias/Not%C3%ADcia/news/29717/


anarcos



Vlatko Andonovski Names 23-player Training Camp Roster for WNT Summer Series Presented by AT&T 5G

USA Will Play Portugal (June 10) and Jamaica (June 13) at BBVA Stadium in Houston and Open the New Q2 Stadium in Austin on June 16 Against Nigeria

CHICAGO (May 25, 2021) – U.S. Women's National Team head coach Vlatko Andonovski has named 23 players for a training camp and games during the 2021 WNT Summer Series, Presented by AT&T 5G.

The USA's three games of the Summer Series begin with a match against Portugal on June 10 at BBVA Stadium in Houston (broadcast on FS1 begins at 7 p.m. CT with kick-off at 7:30 p.m. CT / 8:30 p.m. ET), followed by a meeting with Jamaica on June 13 (9 p.m. CT / 10 p.m. ET on FS1), also at BBVA Stadium. The USA will then travel to Austin to face Nigeria on June 16 (8 p.m. CT / 9 p.m. ET on ESPN2) at Q2 Stadium in what will be the first soccer match at the brand new, state-of-the-art venue.

The roster features 19 NWSL players and four from clubs in Europe. These matches will mark the final games before Andonovski and his staff choose the final Olympic Team roster for the delayed Tokyo 2020 Summer Games.

"These games and the few training sessions we'll have are just more tests, more challenges and more learning opportunities, for the players and coaches," said Andonovski. "The three matches will certainly be important in the selection of the Olympic Team, but we are also focused on the big picture and the overall body of work the players have put together over the past year or so for the National Team and their clubs. During these games we'll also focus on preparing for the Olympic group matches, so we need to balance all of that, as well as manage the overall physical load on the players."

The USA will also play two Olympic send-off matches in early July before leaving for Japan. At the Olympic Final Draw on April 21, the USA was drawn into Group G where it will face Sweden (July 21 in Tokyo), New Zealand (July 24 in Saitama) and Australia (July 27 in Kashima) during group play. The Summer Series schedule, with two rest days between games, will mimic the cadence of Olympic group play.



Forward Tobin Heath will also join camp as a training player as she continues her comeback from a knee injury. Midfielder Julie Ertz has been ruled out of the Summer Series due to an MCL injury suffered while playing with the Chicago Red Stars in the first game of the new NWSL season.

Tickets for all the matches go on sale to the public on Saturday, May 29 at 10 a.m. CT through ussoccer.com. U.S. Soccer Insiders will be able to participate in exclusive pre-sales starting May 25.

Once the teams arrive in Houston, and for the USA and Nigeria in Austin, all the players and staffs will operate inside highly controlled environments at the host hotels. The staging of trainings and the matches will fall under the comprehensive U.S. Soccer Return to Play Protocols and Guidelines and in accordance with the Concacaf Return to Play Protocols. Everyone entering the controlled environment will be tested for COVID-19 before traveling, upon arrival and periodically thereafter. The teams will not begin full team training until the results of all arrival tests are confirmed.

Additional Notes:

  - Forward Carli Lloyd, who earned her historic 300th cap on April 10 vs. Sweden in Stockholm, will be honored for the achievement prior to the USA's June 16 match vs. Nigeria in Austin.

  - Lloyd's next goal will be the 125th of her international career. She is currently six behind Kristine Lilly, who is in third place on the USA's all-time goal scoring list.

  - Lloyd is by far the most experienced player on the roster with 301 caps. The next most experienced player -- defender Becky Sauerbrunn – is 117 caps behind her with 184. The other players on the roster with over 100 caps are forwards Alex Morgan (175), Megan Rapinoe (175), Christen Press (144), and defenders Kelley O'Hara (136) and Crystal Dunn (111).

  - Ten players on the roster have 36 or fewer caps.

  - The average caps per player on this roster is 76.

  - The average age of the roster is 28.

  - Rapinoe leads the USA in scoring so far in 2021 with seven goals. Rapinoe's all-time high in a calendar year for the USWNT is nine goals, achieved in 2019.

  - Ten other players have scored for the USA this year, led by midfielder Samantha Mewis with three.

  - Rapinoe's next goal will be her 60th and would make her just the 11th player in USWNT history to score 60 or more goals in her career.

  - Lloyd and Lindsey Horan are tied for the most assists so far this year with four each.

  - The youngest player on the roster is 20-year-old forward Sophia Smith who was four years old when Lloyd made her USWNT debut. When Smith debuted against the Netherlands last November, she became the first player born in the aughts to earn a senior team cap.

  - Mewis and midfielder Rose Lavelle come into camp after returning to the NWSL from Manchester City in England where they helped the club to a second-place finish in the Women's Super League and an FA Cup title.

  - Defender Alana Cook, who is playing in France with first-place Paris Saint-Germain, may come to camp as a Division 1 Feminine champion with the title-deciding clash against arch-rival Lyon set for May 30.

  - Midfielder Catarina Macario will also join the U.S. team from France where she is on a roll with Lyon, having scored in five consecutive games before not tallying in Lyon's 1-0 win vs. Bordeaux over the weekend.

  - With both Kristie (30-years-old) and Samantha Mewis (28) named to the roster, the Mewis sisters will once again have the possibility to play together for the USA. They already hold the USWNT record for most games played together as sisters with four games. They most recently shared the field on April 10 against Sweden in Stockholm. With 22 and 72 caps respectively, they are approaching a combined 100 caps between the sisters. The record for sisters is 123 caps between Lorrie Fair (120) and Ronnie Fair (3).

  - Of the USA's five previous meetings with Nigeria, four came in the World Cup and one in the Olympics, all wins for the USA. In fact, the USA faced Nigeria in group play in three consecutive World Cups – 1999, 2003, 2007 – and also in 2015.

  - The USA and Nigeria most recently met in group play at the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, a 1-0 victory on Abby Wambach's final World Cup goal.

  - The USA has played Portugal nine times, all wins, and most recently met on Sept. 3, 2019, on the Victory Tour after the Women's World Cup, a 3-0 win in St. Paul, Minn. behind a Lloyd brace and a goal from Horan.

  - On Nov. 8, 2018, against Portugal, the USWNT earned its historic 500th victory in program history, winning 1-0 in Lisbon.

  - The USA has played Jamaica just three times in its history, all in Concacaf qualifying matches, most recently a 6-0 win in qualifying for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. Like with Nigeria, this will be the first friendly between the teams.

https://www.ussoccer.com/stories/2021/05/uswnt-head-coach-vlatko-andonovski-names-23-player-training-camp-roster-for-2021-wnt-summer-series

Eagle Heart

Citação de: RED_SHARK38 em 27 de Maio de 2021, 20:44
Com o devido respeito pelas atletas em questão, a equipa da FPF merece a mesma atenção de que as conferências de imprensa do pastilhas lagarto fajuto!
Ao contrário do que tentam divulgar por todos os cantos, o desenvolvimento do Futebol Feminino passará sempre por uma competição digna e o mais competitiva possível.
PRIMEIRO OS CLUBES E DEPOIS A SELECÇÃO NACIONAL!
Enquanto não houver coragem de limpar as equipas que estão a mais e os agentes desportivos que estão a mais, vamos andar a viver no faz de conta.
Que me importa se um conjunto de atletas joguem x minutos contra os EUA se depois irão durante um ano a pasmaçar contra os fófós e os tótós???
Acham que o upgrade competitivo que este tipo de jogo dá, se aproveita enchendo numa garrafinha para depois ir bebendo durante o ano???
Vamos é ver se depois esta treta de convocatórias se vira contra nós, como aparentemente se pode ter virado contra as lagartas no final do campeonato...


Eh pá!!
Por favor nao venham tambem para aqui com aquele odio de estimaçao à FPF e à Selecçao que costuma haver no topico das Selecções de Portugal.
Já basta lá.
A gerencia agradece.  O0 O0

RED_SHARK38

Ou seja???
Falo de Futebol Feminino, não falo da equipa do Reinaldo...


anarcos

FIFA publishes first-ever comprehensive analysis of the elite women's football landscape



- Setting The Pace: new report provides overview of elite women's football at league and club level
- Document includes survey results from 30 leagues and 282 clubs on sporting, governance, finance, fan engagement and player-related topics
- Report aims to help guide key decisions shaping the future development and professionalisation of women's football


As part of its overall vision to globalise football and accelerate the growth of women's football, FIFA has today published a landmark report on the development and professionalisation of elite women's football landscape around the world.

Speaking on the report, Gianni Infantino, FIFA President said:

"Boosting the development and growth of women's football – on and off the pitch - is a key commitment and top priority for FIFA. As the interest continues to increase, we must focus on developing an in-depth understanding of the elite women's football landscape. This document has been developed with the aim of supporting our women's football stakeholders to better understand this landscape and to maximise its big potential.

"By working together, and embracing the challenges and exciting opportunities that lie ahead, I strongly believe we can bring women's football to more people around the world and make it truly global."

The FIFA Benchmarking Report: Women's Football provides important insights into several key areas of the elite women's game including sporting, finance, fan engagement, player related matters and COVID-19. The information comes from a survey completed by a selection of 30 of the top tier women's football leagues from around the world and 282 of their respective clubs.

Key findings include:

1. For leagues in which 80% or more participating clubs have a girls' youth structure, the average national-team ranking is 13, compared to a ranking of 28 for all other leagues.
2. Leagues with both a club licensing system and financial controls have a higher proportion of clubs that are profitable or break even (36% v. 32%) and a higher average club revenue (USD 0.9m v. USD 0.3m).
3. In 65% of leagues surveyed, teams with the highest qualified coaches outperformed other teams, underlining the importance of coach education and development in the women's game.
4. Clubs with better access to higher number and quality of facilities outperform other clubs in their league: 50% of teams with access to a set standard of higher number and quality facilities were league champions in the last five years, compared with only 23% for all other clubs.
5. Broadcasting women's football on traditional and digital platforms represents a significant growth opportunity with broadcast income currently accounting for an average of 6% of revenue for clubs and 18% of revenue for leagues that were surveyed.
6. Teams offering a season ticket had higher average league attendances (1,400 v 1,000) and earned higher revenue (USD 0.8m v. USD 0.3m)
7. Clubs with a written strategy for women's football tend to have higher average club revenue (USD 0.6m v. USD 0.3m), more facilities available to the first team and higher match attendances (1,400 v. 700)
8. Leagues that negotiate broadcast rights exclusively for the women's league generate, on average, USD 0.7m revenue from broadcast compared with only USD 0.1m for other leagues that do not.
9. 72% of clubs reported that they negotiate some of their sponsorship contracts for the women's team only. On average, these clubs achieved a higher total revenue and sponsorship revenue.
10. The clubs that generate the highest revenue (in excess of USD 1m) raise over half of it through sponsorship, compared to less than a third for clubs averaging revenue of less than USD 1m.

Sarai Bareman, Chief Women's Football Officer, added:

"Whilst many clubs and leagues continue to navigate the impact of COVID-19 on football, this report provides key insights into the reality of the women's game, as well as the many opportunities and challenges, on and off the pitch for players, clubs and leagues around the world. It is paramount, as we look to the future of our game and take decisions that will impact generations to come, that we base these decisions on a clear understanding of where we are. This means generating these insights into what is working well in the current context. This report is an important document to support the decision making process of the stakeholders involved in the game.

Whilst the progress already made and FIFA's commitment to the women's game is clear, more can still be done across football to maximize the exciting opportunities on the horizon and ensure a strong and sustainable ecosystem for the whole of women's football."

To access the FIFA Benchmarking Report: Women's Football, please click HERE.

https://www.fifa.com/who-we-are/news/fifa-publishes-first-ever-comprehensive-analysis-of-the-elite-women-s-football-l#fifa-benchmarking-report-women-s-football