Alterações nas Hipotecas e Refinanciamento - Post Milenio
Alterações nas Hipotecas e Refinanciamento - Post Milenio
Alterações nas Hipotecas e Refinanciamento - Post Milenio
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Milénio Stadium... Às Sextas-feiras, bem pertinho de si!<br />
De 29 de Junho a 5 de Julho de 2012<br />
21<br />
Women’s Soccer Players join 2012 Canadian Olympic Team<br />
18 players to represent Canada in London<br />
The Canadian<br />
Soccer<br />
Association<br />
has nominated its<br />
roster for the London<br />
2012 Women's<br />
Olympic Football<br />
Tournament.<br />
Canadian head coach<br />
John Herdman has<br />
selected 18 players<br />
that will join Team<br />
Canada for the<br />
London 2012<br />
Olympic Games.<br />
Canada's roster features<br />
goalkeepers Karina<br />
LeBlanc and Erin McLeod,<br />
defenders Candace<br />
Chapman, Carmelina<br />
Moscato, Emily Zurrer,<br />
Robyn Gayle, Lauren<br />
Sesselmann, Chelsea<br />
Stewart and Rhian<br />
Wilkinson, midfielders<br />
Kaylyn Kyle, Diana<br />
Matheson, Kelly Parker,<br />
Sophie Schmidt and<br />
Desiree Scott, and forwards<br />
Jonelle Filigno, Christine<br />
Sinclair, Melissa Tancredi<br />
and Brittany Timko.<br />
“On behalf of the 2012<br />
Canadian Olympic Team, I<br />
am very happy to welcome<br />
these exceptional athletes,”<br />
said 2012 Canadian<br />
Olympic Team Chef de<br />
Mission Mark Tewksbury.<br />
“I know they will make<br />
Canadians proud in<br />
London.”<br />
“These athletes give<br />
their everything to represent<br />
Canada,” said Canadian<br />
Olympic Committee<br />
President Marcel Aubut.<br />
“They are an inspiration to<br />
us all and I look forward to<br />
seeing them take the pitch<br />
in London.”<br />
This marks Canada's<br />
second participation in the<br />
Women's Olympic Football<br />
Tournament. Canada is one<br />
of 12 teams with medal<br />
hopes, with the competition<br />
split into three groups of<br />
four teams for the group<br />
phase.<br />
Canada, a two-time<br />
CONCACAF champion,<br />
qualified for the London<br />
2012 Olympics out of<br />
Vancouver, BC in January.<br />
In front of packed Canadian<br />
crowd at BC Place, Canada<br />
won a confederation silver<br />
medal after qualifying as<br />
one of two Olympic teams<br />
from CONCACAF.<br />
Of Canada's 18 players,<br />
14 of them were CONCA-<br />
CAF champions in<br />
December 2010, including<br />
two-time champion Karina<br />
LeBlanc. Canada's most<br />
experienced players are<br />
Christine Sinclair (captain),<br />
Diana Matheson, Rhian<br />
Wilkinson, Brittany Timko,<br />
Candace Chapman and<br />
LeBlanc (all with more than<br />
100 appearances at the<br />
international "A"<br />
level). Seventeen players<br />
have participated<br />
in at least one FIFA<br />
Women's World Cup,<br />
all but Lauren<br />
Sesselmann who is<br />
also Canada's least<br />
experienced player (16<br />
international appearances).<br />
Twelve of<br />
Canada's 18 players<br />
also have experience<br />
from the last Women's<br />
Olympic Football<br />
Tournament at Beijing<br />
2008. That was the<br />
year Canada reached<br />
the quarter-final phase<br />
of the competition,<br />
only falling in extra<br />
time to eventual champion<br />
and CONCA-<br />
CAF rival USA. The<br />
six players hoping to<br />
make their Olympic<br />
debut at London 2012<br />
are Sesselmann,<br />
Chelsea Stewart,<br />
Kelly Parker, Desiree<br />
Scott, Kaylyn Kyle<br />
and Carmelina<br />
Moscato.<br />
Seventeen of<br />
Canada's 18 players<br />
also came up through<br />
the Canadian national<br />
youth program (all but<br />
Sesselmann). Six<br />
players won a silver<br />
medal at the FIFA U-<br />
20 World Cup Canada<br />
2002: Sinclair, Timko,<br />
Chapman, Erin<br />
McLeod, Carmelina<br />
Moscato and Robyn<br />
Gayle. Six players<br />
won a CONCACAF<br />
youth title with<br />
Canada, be it in 2004<br />
(Timko and Emily<br />
Zurrer) or 2008<br />
(Jonelle Filigno,<br />
Kaylyn Kyle, Sophie<br />
Schmidt and Chelsea<br />
Stewart).<br />
Canada faces Japan on<br />
25 July in Coventry, South<br />
Africa on 28 July in<br />
Coventry, and Sweden on<br />
31 July in Newcastle. Both<br />
Japan (champion) and<br />
Sweden (bronze) were<br />
medal winners at the most<br />
recent FIFA Women's<br />
World Cup Germany 2011.<br />
Either two or three<br />
teams will advance from<br />
each group, with eight<br />
teams participating in the<br />
quarter-final phase. The<br />
quarter-final matches are on<br />
3 August, the semi-final<br />
matches are on 6 August,<br />
and the final medal matches<br />
are on 9 August.