2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship Squads
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2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship Squads
This article describes about the squads for the 2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship. Group A Austria Head coach: Hannes Spilka The final 21-women squad was revealed on 10 July 2023. Naika Reissner was replaced by Livia Pertl due to a knee injury. Belgium Head coach: Xavier Donnay The final 20-women squad was revealed on 12 July 2023. Germany Head coach: Kathrin Peter The final 20-women squad was revealed on 5 July 2023. Netherlands Head coach: Roos Kwakkenbos The final 20-women squad was revealed on 6 July 2023. Group B Czech Republic Head coach: Jan Navrátil The final 20-women squad was revealed on 30 June 2023. France Head coach: Sandrine Ringler The final 20-women squad was revealed on 8 July 2023. Iceland Head coach: Margrét Magnúsdóttir The final 20-women squad was revealed on 23 June 2023. Ald ...
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2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship
The 2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship was the 20th edition of the UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, the annual international youth football championship organised by UEFA for the women's under-19 national teams of Europe. Belgium hosted the tournament on 18–30 July. It was the first women's final tournament held in Belgium. A total of eight teams played in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2004 eligible to participate. Similar to the previous editions held in odd-numbered years, the tournament acted as the UEFA qualifiers for the FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup. The top four teams of the tournament qualified for the 2024 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Colombia as the UEFA representatives. However, on 4 October 2023, after the announcement of the expansion of the 2024 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup to 24 teams, a new fifth spot was allocated to UEFA and the winner of a play-off between the group stage third-placed teams would take this fifth spot. Spain wer ...
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KRC Genk Ladies
KRC Genk Ladies is a Belgium, Belgian women's soccer, women's football club based in Genk. It is the women's section of KRC Genk. The club was formed as a merger of clubs from Lanaken and Zonhoven in 2013, and has been known as Ladies Genk since 2015 when they relocated to Genk. They play in the Super League Vrouwenvoetbal, Super League, the highest level in Belgium. Current squad Former players Honours References External links

* Women's football clubs in Belgium Association football clubs established in 1971 1971 establishments in Belgium K.R.C. Genk Sport in Limburg (Belgium) {{Belgium-footyclub-stub ...
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Royal Dutch Football Association
The Royal Dutch Football Association (, ; KNVB ) is the governing body of football in the Netherlands. It organises the main Dutch football leagues ( Eredivisie and Eerste Divisie), the amateur leagues, the KNVB Cup, and the Dutch men's and women's national teams. For three seasons in the 2010s, the KNVB and its Belgian counterpart operated a joint top-level women's league, the BeNe League, until the two countries dissolved the league after the 2014–15 season and re-established their own top-level leagues. The KNVB is based in the central municipality of Zeist. With over 1.2 million members, the KNVB is the single largest sports association in the Netherlands. History In 1889, the Nederlandse Voetbal en Athletiek Bond was founded. Due to certain disagreements, several football clubs ended their association with it and joined together to form Koninklijke Nederlandse Voetbalbond (KNVB) which was later renamed to its present name. It was one of the founding members of FIFA ...
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Roos Kwakkenbos
Roos is a village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is situated east from Kingston upon Hull city centre and north-west from Withernsea, and on the B1242 road. History The de Ros family originated from the village of Roos. Robert de Ros (died 1227) was one of the twenty-five barons appointed under clause 61 of the 1215 Magna Carta agreement to monitor its observance by King John of England. Geography The civil parish is formed by the villages of Roos, Hilston and Tunstall, together with the hamlet of Owstwick. According to the 2011 UK census, Roos parish had a population of 1,168, an increase on the 2001 UK census figure of 1,113. The parish covers an area of . The Prime Meridian crosses the coast to the east of Roos. The parish church of All Saints is a Grade I listed building. Governance Roos is represented locally by Roos Parish Council while at county level is in the South East Holderness ward of the East Riding of Yorkshire Council ...
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