Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On October 13, 2021, in a World Cup qualifying match against Panama, Davies scored a highlight reel goal, making an 80-yard run to keep the ball in play, reaching a top speed of 37.1 km/h. [107] [108] Davies played a central role in Canada's qualification campaign for most of the calendar, but he missed the final two international windows as a ...
Struck a tree at 150 km/h in a 100 km/h limit zone. [164] Ghazi of Iraq: 1912 1939 27 years King of Iraq 1933–1939 car Baghdad, Kingdom of Iraq: Ghazi died in 1939 in a mysterious crash involving a sports car he was driving. [165] Some believe he was killed on the orders of Nuri as-Said. Ray Gibb: 1928 1953 24 years Australian Australian ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Donald H. Sparrow – businessman and Conservative politician; Jay Sparrow – singer/songwriter; Paul Spence – actor; portrays headbanger Dean Murdoch in FUBAR; George Stanley – designer of the current Canadian flag; Muriel Stanley Venne – Indigenous women's rights advocate [2] Vic Stasiuk – hockey player; David Stephan
Several big European clubs have shown interest in Bayern Munich's 24-year-old Canada full-back Alphonso Davies, including Liverpool, Real Madrid and Barcelona. (Athletic - subscription required)
The works team had two of their mighty new Type 335 S, with its big 4.0L V12 engine (capable of 390 PS [13]) for their grand prix drivers: Mike Hawthorn / Luigi Musso and Peter Collins / Phil Hill - their driver ranks were sadly depleted after the deaths, earlier in the year, of works drivers Eugenio Castellotti and then Alfonso de Portago (in ...
Alphonso Davies (born 2000), captain of the Canadian national soccer team; Chuck Dubuque (1932–2020), HB soccer player; Daniel Fernandes (born 1983), Portuguese Canadian professional soccer player; Lars Hirschfeld (born 1978), soccer goalkeeper; Stephanie Labbé (born 1986), soccer goalkeeper for the Canadian Women's National Team, Olympic ...
Le Mans in 1926. The 1926 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 4th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 12 and 13 June 1926. It was the first Le Mans race where the winner's average speed was over 100 km/h (62 mph), and also the first to break the 24-hour distance record set by Selwyn Edge at Brooklands in 1907.