Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 5:09 am
by iworo
Canadian women to play Nigeria in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
By The Canadian Press
Canada will face 36th-ranked Nigeria on Wednesday in a closed-door training match in Marbella, Spain, in the final tune-up for Bev Priestman’s team before it opens defence of its women’s soccer title at the Paris Olympics.
Canada’s Simi Awujo, left, and Jessie Fleming celebrate winning in a shootout against Brazil in a SheBelieves Cup women’s soccer game on April 6, 2024 in Atlanta.
Canada will face 36th-ranked Nigeria on Wednesday in a closed-door training match in Marbella, Spain, in the final tune-up for Bev Priestman’s team before it opens defence of its women’s soccer title at the Paris Olympics.
Canada Soccer had previously announced the closed-door fixture but didn’t reveal the opponent until Monday.
The eighth-ranked Canadian women, who opened camp in Spain on July 4, edged No. 12 Australia 2-1 on Saturday in Marbella. That was a Tier 2 match that doesn’t count toward ranking or statistics, because there was no limit for substitutions or windows for subs.
Canada opens Group A play at the Olympics on July 25 against No. 28 New Zealand before facing No. 2 France on July 28, and No. 22 Colombia on July 31. Nigeria will play in Group C with No. 1 Spain, No. 7 Japan and No. 9 Brazil.
Canada has a 2-1-3 all-time record against Nigeria, drawing 0-0 when they met last summer at the FIFA World Cup in Australia.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 15, 2024.
I like this coach. He say’s the right things. Maybe he can double as SE coach.
Coaching a women's soccer team is definitely different from coaching a men's soccer team in several ways.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 9:04 pm
by jette1
Where is Danfo conductor; I have a question for you. Who came up with the name conductor bearing in mind that all you are doing is hanging by the door of a moving vehicle and collecting money. What in fact are you conducting ?
An orchestra leader is actually conducting something unlike you
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
I like this coach. He say’s the right things. Maybe he can double as SE coach.
I’m sure he would sleep over the idea if an offer is made to him especially given we can’t afford a real mens coach.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 9:31 pm
by ohenhen1
WOWO has reached a new level. They are now advocating a woman College coach that has never won a single strophy to be thyh new SE coach. Nigeria falcons finished 4th at Afcon after winning it 4 times in a row.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 5:15 am
by iworo
Super Falcons narrowly beaten by Olympic champions Canada but win post-game shootout 5-4
The Super Falcons stepped up their preparations for the 2024 Olympic Games with a high-profile friendly against reigning champions Canada at La Quinta Football Center Malaga on Wednesday evening, allnigeriasoccer.com reports.
Despite the omission of former Barcelona striker Asisat Oshoala, a strong-looking starting lineup took to the pitch, with starting berths handed to Chiamaka Nnadozie, Osinachi Ohale, Chidinma Okeke,Tosin Demehin, Michelle Alozie, Christy Ucheibe, Abiodun Deborah,Toni Payne, Jennifer Echegini, Rasheedat Ajibade and Chinwendu Ihezuo.
In the closed-door friendly, the Canadians scored what proved to be the game-winning goal before the 20th minute mark.
The Super Falcons searched for an equalizer in the second half but Canada's defence held strong and saw out a clean sheet.
Coach Randy Waldrum's girls earned a morale-boosting 5-4 win over the Concacaf giants in the post-game penalty shootout,
Nigeria's goalscorers in the shootout were Asisat Oshoala, Rasheedat Ajibade, Toni Payne, Deborah Abiodun and Christy Ucheibe.
One of Canada's most experienced players, Aston Villa's Adriana Leon was the only player to miss from the spot in the shootout, blasting her kick over the bar.
Nigeria will face three of the top ten ranked Fifa nations at the upcoming Olympic Games, opening group play against Brazil on July 25, followed by matches with world champions Spain on July 28 and Japan on July 31.
AN EXAMPLE OF...great communication between the interviewer and the one being interviewed. Questions were clear, concise and to the point; ditto the answers. This is why I've advocated that Nigerian coaches include public communication as part of their development.
Bell
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
AN EXAMPLE OF...great communication between the interviewer and the one being interviewed. Questions were clear, concise and to the point; ditto the answers. This is why I've advocated that Nigerian coaches include public communication as part of their development.
Bell
Bell,
Are you, perhaps, subliminally impressed by the fact that Randy Waldrum is a native English speaker?
What Nigeria and other African countries should do is develop their own languages so that Africans wouldn’t have to struggle with the burden of speaking a language that’s been forced on them
Cheers.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
AN EXAMPLE OF...great communication between the interviewer and the one being interviewed. Questions were clear, concise and to the point; ditto the answers. This is why I've advocated that Nigerian coaches include public communication as part of their development.
Bell
Bell,
Are you, perhaps, subliminally impressed by the fact that Randy Waldrum is a native English speaker?
What Nigeria and other African countries should do is develop their own languages so that Africans wouldn’t have to struggle with the burden of speaking a language that’s been forced on them
Cheers.
Do you feel inferior
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
AN EXAMPLE OF...great communication between the interviewer and the one being interviewed. Questions were clear, concise and to the point; ditto the answers. This is why I've advocated that Nigerian coaches include public communication as part of their development.
Bell
...no be Nigeria coaches only, Nigeria president and government officials when conducting business abroad or being interviewed by oyinbo press.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
AN EXAMPLE OF...great communication between the interviewer and the one being interviewed. Questions were clear, concise and to the point; ditto the answers. This is why I've advocated that Nigerian coaches include public communication as part of their development.
Bell
Bell,
Are you, perhaps, subliminally impressed by the fact that Randy Waldrum is a native English speaker?
What Nigeria and other African countries should do is develop their own languages so that Africans wouldn’t have to struggle with the burden of speaking a language that’s been forced on them
What are you talking about? Didn’t our journalist attend school or have done kind of degree? English is our official language. It’s not that our journalist can’t speak, most of them ask weird questions that makes you want to bury your head.
Cheers.
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Sat Jul 20, 2024 4:25 pm
by wiseone
That match report was appalling. Was the writer a professional journalist? One had to read the whole article to decipher what the score was (which is not once mentioned in the article). If Canada won the match, why was there a penalty shoot out?
Re: Canadian women to play Nigeria on Wednesday (July 17) in closed-door training match ahead of Olympics
Posted: Sun Jul 21, 2024 7:54 am
by Gotti
wiseone wrote: ↑Sat Jul 20, 2024 4:25 pm
That match report was appalling. Was the writer a professional journalist? One had to read the whole article to decipher what the score was (which is not once mentioned in the article). If Canada won the match, why was there a penalty shoot out?