Perpetua Nkwocha
Yi palo
Perpetua Nkwocha | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Lagos, Silimin gɔli January 3, 1976 (run 49) | |
O ya Tiŋgbaŋ | Nigeria |
Education | |
Bala yɛlibu, sabbu bee buɣisibu | Silmiinsili |
Tuma | |
Tuma | bol'ŋmɛra |
Participant in | forward (en) ![]() |
Position played on team / speciality | 22 |
Dubu | 180 cm |
Pin' shɛŋa o ni dee |
Perpetua Ijeoma Nkwocha // (listen) (bɛ daa dɔɣi o la Silimiin goli January dabaa ata dali yuuni 1976) nyɛla Nigerianima boliŋmɛri baŋda kuro ŋun nyɛ paɣa ka daa nyɛ boliŋmɛra kpɛma zaŋ n-ti Nigeria women's national football team. O nyɛla koachi zaŋ n-ti Clemensnäs IF din be Swedish Women's Football Division 2. O nyɛla ŋun na min ŋmɛ bolli n-ti Swedish club Sunnanå SK.
Maŋmaŋ biɛhigu
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Nkwocha nyɛla ŋun mali alikawli ni Turkey tooni boliŋmɛra kuro Çanakkale Dardanelspor saha ŋɔ Piteå IF nyɛla ŋun ŋmɛri Ghanaian bolli Justice Tetteh Komey.[1]
Honours
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Nigeria
Individual
- African Women's Footballer of the Year: 2004, 2005, 2010, 2011
- African Women's Championship Top goalscorer: 2004, 2006, 2010
- IFFHS All-time Africa Women's Dream Team: 2021[2]
Career statistics
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]No. | Date | Venue | Opponent | Score | Result | Competition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 14 September 2000 | Canberra, Australia | ![]() | 1–3 | 1–3 | 2000 Summer Olympics |
2 | 13 December 2002 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 2–0 | 5–1 | 2002 African Women's Championship |
3 | 4–1 | |||||
4 | 18 December 2002 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 4–0 | 5–0 | 2002 African Women's Championship |
5 | 20 December 2002 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 1–0 | 2–0 | 2002 African Women's Championship |
6 | 12 March 2004 | South Africa | ![]() | 2–0 | 2–2 | 2004 Summer Olympics qualification |
7 | 22 April 2004 | Reading, England | ![]() | 2–0 | 3–0 | Friendly |
8 | 3–0 | |||||
9 | 19 September 2004 | Germiston, South Africa | ![]() | 3–0 | 4–0 | 2004 African Women's Championship |
10 | 22 September 2004 | ![]() | 1–0 | 2–2 | 2004 African Women's Championship | |
11 | 25 September 2004 | Pretoria, South Africa | ![]() | 2–0 | 3–0 | 2004 African Women's Championship |
12 | 3–0 | |||||
13 | 28 September 2004 | Johannesburg, South Africa | ![]() | 4–0 | 4–0 | 2004 African Women's Championship |
14 | 3 October 2004 | Johannesburg, South Africa | ![]() | 1–0 | 5–0 | 2004 African Women's Championship |
15 | 2–0 | |||||
16 | 3–0 | |||||
17 | 4–0 | |||||
18 | 28 October 2006 | Oleh, Nigeria | ![]() | 3–2 | 4–2 | 2006 African Women's Championship |
19 | 31 October 2006 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 2–0 | 6–0 | 2006 African Women's Championship |
20 | 6–0 | |||||
21 | 7 November 2006 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 2–0 | 5–0 | 2006 African Women's Championship |
22 | 3–0 | |||||
23 | 4–0 | |||||
24 | 11 November 2006 | Warri, Nigeria | ![]() | 1–0 | 1–0 | 2006 African Women's Championship |
25 | 22 July 2007 | Algiers, Algeria | ![]() | 3–0 | 4–0 | 2007 All-Africa Games |
26 | 12 August 2008 | Beijing, China | ![]() | 1–0 | 1–3 | 2008 Summer Olympics |
27 | 1 November 2010 | Daveyton, South Africa | ![]() | 1–0 | 5–0 | 2010 African Women's Championship |
28 | 2–0 | |||||
29 | 3–0 | |||||
30 | 4 November 2010 | Daveyton, South Africa | ![]() | 1–0 | 2–1 | 2010 African Women's Championship |
31 | 2–0 | |||||
32 | 7 November 2010 | Daveyton, South Africa | Tɛmplet:Country data TAN | 1–0 | 3–0 | 2010 African Women's Championship |
33 | 2–0 | |||||
34 | 11 November 2010 | Daveyton, South Africa | ![]() | 3–1 | 5–1 | 2010 African Women's Championship |
35 | 4–1 | |||||
36 | 5–1 | |||||
37 | 14 November 2010 | Daveyton, South Africa | ![]() | 1–0 | 4–2 | 2010 African Women's Championship |
38 | 5 July 2011 | Dresden, Germany | Tɛmplet:Country data CAN | 1–0 | 1–0 | 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup |
39 | 16 June 2012 | Lagos, Nigeria | Tɛmplet:Country data ZIM | 1–0 | 4–0 | 2012 African Women's Championship qualification |
40 | 29 October 2012 | Bata, Equatorial Guinea | ![]() | 2–1 | 2–1 | 2012 African Women's Championship |
41 | 1 November 2012 | Bata, Equatorial Guinea | ![]() | 3–0 | 3–0 | 2012 African Women's Championship |
42 | 14 October 2014 | Windhoek, Namibia | Tɛmplet:Country data ZAM | 6–0 | 6–0 | 2014 African Women's Championship |
Kundivihira
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- ↑ FF har gjort klart med Tetteh Komey. Norran.
- ↑ IFFHS All-time Africa Women's Dream Team. The International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS) (7 June 2021).
External links
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Perpetua Nkwocha – FIFA competition record (archived)
- Pictures of Perpetua receiving African Women Player of the Year award in 2004
- Tɛmplet:SvFF player (archive)
- Perpetua Nkwocha at Clemensnäs IF at the Wayback Machine (archived 2016-03-04) (in Swedish)
- Perpetua Nkwocha at Soccerway
Tɛmplet:S-refTɛmplet:African Women's Footballer of the Year
Pubu pubu:
- All stub articles
- People stubs
- Articles with hAudio microformats
- Pages including recorded pronunciations
- Webarchive template wayback links
- Articles with Swedish-language sources (sv)
- Lahabaya zaa
- 1976 births
- Living people
- Nigerian women's footballers
- 21st-century Nigerian sportswomen
- Nigeria women's international footballers
- 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup players
- 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup players
- Footballers at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Footballers at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Footballers at the 2008 Summer Olympics
- Olympic footballers for Nigeria
- 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players
- 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players
- Sunnanå SK players
- Damallsvenskan players
- Expatriate women's footballers in Sweden
- Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Sweden
- Nigerian expatriate women's footballers
- Women's association football midfielders
- African Women's Footballer of the Year winners
- Igbo sportspeople
- Place of birth missing (living people)