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2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup; Copa de Oro de la CONCACAF 2011 (in Spanish) Tournament details; Host country: United States: Dates: June 5–25: Teams: 12 (from 1 confederation) Venue(s) 13 (in 13 host cities) Final positions; Champions Mexico (6th title) Runners-up United States: Tournament statistics; Matches played: 25: Goals scored: 80 (3.2 per ...
Both rounds in the second stage are played with about 7 teams. The winner of the Copa de Oro is the national champion and qualifies to the Copa Libertadores Femenina. [1] The losers of the Copa de Plata are relegated to the Campeonato Uruguayo Femenino B. Since 2017 the Apertura and Clausura format is played. In 2017 there were two stages.
The women's football section of the Uruguayan Football Association started in 1996 and the first official competition of the national team took place in the 1998 South American Championship. Separately, there was a women's football team representing Uruguay at least as early as 1962, when they played an international game at Estadio Belvedere ...
Unlike previous Women's World Cup final tournaments, there were no double-headers, but matches on the same day were held in different venues. According to the Organising Committee, this "signals the increased quality and status of the women's finals". [12] Qualified countries' results All times are in the CEST time zone (UTC+2).
On October 22, 2011, FIFA awarded English-language rights to its tournaments to Fox from 2015 through 2022, including the 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cup, and the 2015 (which would mark Fox's first professional FIFA tournament broadcast) and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, replacing ESPN and ABC.
In the team's debut, they managed a shocking 0–0 draw to Japan, former champions of 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, and gained its first ever point in any Women's World Cup. The next match was a narrow 1–0 loss to England , and then an exciting 3–3 draw to Scotland , after being down 3–0 with 25 minutes left.
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The Bolivia women's national football team (Spanish: selección femenina de fútbol de Bolivia) represents Bolivia in international women's football and is controlled by the Federación Boliviana de Fútbol. Bolivia has never qualified for a World Cup and has been always eliminated in the Group Stage in the Sudamericano Femenino.