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The New Zealand women's national football team (recognised as Aotearoa New Zealand by FIFA) [3] is governed by New Zealand Football (NZF). They are nicknamed the Football Ferns. The New Zealand national team has taken part in the FIFA Women's World Cup six times, making their debut in 1991. [4] New Zealand co-hosted the 2023 World Cup alongside ...
New Zealand ended a season-long title drought by beating France in the women’s final. The Argentina men now have won the last three World Series tournaments in Cape Town, Perth and Vancouver and ...
New Zealand women's national football team (6 C, 6 P) Pages in category "Women's national sports teams of New Zealand" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
A day after New Zealand opened the first 32-team Women’s World Cup with a victory over Norway, the Sky Tower in Auckland was lit up to say “FERN FEVER” with a photo of forward Hannah ...
It was the nations's 21st appearance at the Commonwealth Games, having competed at every Games since their inception in 1930. The New Zealand team consisted of 251 athletes, 130 men and 121 women, across 17 sports. The New Zealand team collected 46 medals: 15 gold, 16 silver and 15 bronze, an increase of one medal from the previous games. The ...
Fixtures, results and scorecards from New Zealand's women's tour of England, featuring three ODIs and five Twenty20 internationals.
Women’s World Cup co-host New Zealand has announced a squad including 10 players who will be playing at the global tournament for the first time. The team was unveiled Friday after head coach ...
New Zealand women's cricket team in England in 2024 England: New Zealand: Dates: 26 June – 17 July 2024: Captains: Heather Knight [n 1] Sophie Devine: One Day International series; Results: England won the 3-match series 3–0: Most runs: Maia Bouchier (186) Amelia Kerr (110) Most wickets: Sophie Ecclestone (7) Brooke Halliday (3) Player of ...