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  2. Yo-Yo intermittent test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yo-Yo_intermittent_test

    The Yo-Yo intermittent test is aimed at estimating performance in stop-and-go sports like football (soccer), cricket, basketball and the like. It was conceived around the early 1990s by Jens Bangsbo, [1] a Danish soccer physiologist, then described in a 2008 paper, "The Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Test". [2]

  3. Multi-stage fitness test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-stage_fitness_test

    The Léger test requires the first level to be run at 8.5 km/h. Some organizations require it to be run at 8.0 km/h. Note that the second level is always [4] run at 9.0 km/h. Also, speeds at subsequent levels always increment by 0.5 km/h. The impact of this variation is insignificant as almost all runners' scores easily exceed level 1.

  4. Rank correlation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rank_correlation

    0 if the rankings are completely independent. −1 if the disagreement between the two rankings is perfect; one ranking is the reverse of the other. Following Diaconis (1988), a ranking can be seen as a permutation of a set of objects. Thus we can look at observed rankings as data obtained when the sample space is (identified with) a symmetric ...

  5. Camille Herron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camille_Herron

    In April 2022, she became the youngest woman to reach 100,000 lifetime running miles. [40] [41] [42] In May 2022, she won the Strolling Jim 40 Miler overall, beating the men and setting a new women's course record. [43] In 2023, Herron became the first woman to break 24 hours at the 153-mile Spartathlon, setting a course record of 22h 35min 31s.

  6. Morocco women's national football team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morocco_women's_national...

    The Morocco women's national football team (Arabic: منتخب المغرب لكرة القدم للسيدات) represents Morocco in international women's football and is managed by the Royal Moroccan Football Federation. The team played its first international match in 1998, as part of the third Women's Africa Cup of Nations.

  7. Australia women's national soccer team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia_women's_national...

    The Australia women's national soccer team is overseen by the governing body for soccer in Australia, Football Australia, which is currently a member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and the regional ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) since leaving the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) in 2006.

  8. Brazil women's national football team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil_women's_national...

    Fan bases for the women's team with a new identity rooted themselves in the fabric of history and with the support of the general public the women's game led a rise in feminism that swept across the country. [6] In 1979, the National Sports Council of Brazil passed Deliberation no. 10 reinstating the women's game. [4]

  9. Chinese Taipei women's national football team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Taipei_women's...

    The Chinese Taipei women's national football team has been known or nicknamed as "Mulan".The nickname was adopted by the national federation during the tenure of then-chairman General Cheng Wei-yuan in 1975 after the Chinese folk heroine Hua Mulan.