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#caroline moller
dailyrmadrid · 2 years
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El Real Madrid presenta su nueva equipación para la temporada 2022/23.
Real Madrid's official home kit for the 2022/23 season.
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neight8 · 3 months
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femftbllvr · 1 year
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nelove22 · 2 years
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WOSO FUTTIES | if they were on fifa ⚡
the best cards are here. many different cards, many options
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Caroline Møller and Juel Mads in Læsø
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rma-furiaroja · 2 years
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Møller x Nahikari wallpapers in 2 formats
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realmadridfamily · 2 years
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“This club is marked by tradition and above all by the future yet to come 🤟🏾👀 @realmadrid @adidasfootball ¡120 years of grandeza! ⚪️” - Marcelo
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vchoes · 2 years
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🤍🤍🤍🤍 
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fedevalverdes · 2 years
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Hi I love them so much
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lessirussolvr · 5 months
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coachtfd · 1 year
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Okay Moller, I see you. 😎🙌🏾🙌🏾
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stupidgirl2003 · 6 months
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The Old Mausoleum and Princess Elisabeth.
In the Grand Ducal Hessian family, the name Elisabeth evokes melancholic feelings; as the lives of the beholders of this beautiful name, which means 'God-given', the princesses Elisabeth, later Grand Duchess Elizaveta Feodorovna (1864-1918) and Elisabeth, Elizaveta Feodorovna's niece (1895-1903), were princesses whose lives and destinies were intermingled with happiness, devotion, service, and sadness. Today, remembering the beholders of this name, we can remember another Hessian princess named Elisabeth who, like Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig's daughter, also died in childhood. Being so young when she passed away, information about her is scarce. She was the fourth child and first daughter of the Hereditary Princely couple of Darmstadt, Ludwig and Wilhelmine, but the fact is that Elisabeth's parents had been leading separated lives for a while and, the age gap with her older brothers, Princes Ludwig and Karl, was of more than a decade. Therefore, that her biological father was not the Hereditary Prince does not come as a surprise, being the most probable biological father August von Senarclens-Grancy, a Swiss noble in service to the court. He was also the possible biological father of her younger siblings, Alexander and Marie, but, like her, they were also recognized by Ludwig. Wilhelmine's pregnancy with Elisabeth is mentioned in a letter from her sister, Russian Empress Elizaveta Alexeievna to her mother, Amalie of Hesse-Darmstadt: '...I am very sorry for my poor aunt in Darmstadt [Luise, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by the Rhine, mother-in-law of Wilhelmine], whose eyes are in such a bad state. Is she happy with Mimi's [Wilhelmine's nickname] pregnancy ? Dear mother, I don't think I have been secretive with you, but when Mimi told me that I was the first person she had spoken to about her pregnancy, I thought it was not for me to be the first to speak of it, but for her in every way. I still don't know how far along she is, she hasn't told me, but I'm sure you do, dear mother...' . Three months after this letter was written, on the 20 of May of 1821, Amalie Elisabeth Luise Caroline Friederike was born. Although not directly mentioned, she was possibly named in honor of her maternal grandmother and maternal aunts and her official paternal grandmother. She, as a child, possibly spent the majority of her time with nannies that took care of her, and with her mother Wilhelmine. Elisabeth has been referred to as her mother's favorite daughter. Her mother, who loved to travel to Switzerland and had visited it several times before, decided to take all her children in a travel there, but what was to be a happy event, was marked by tragedy, as Elisabeth, in the outward journey, contracted scarlet fever and died on May 27, 1826, in Lausanne, a week after her fifth birthday.
Little Elisabeth was laid to rest first in the Darmstadt City Church for some time until 1831, when the mausoleum her mother had asked court architect Georg Moller to erect in the Rosehöhe, a most loved place for her, was finished. This mausoleum with time became an important burial place for the Hessian Grand Ducal family.
As for Wilhelmine, with the death of Elisabeth, her love for Switzerland, traveling, and life in general decayed. She said some years later 'the old wanderlust is no longer to be found in me'.
Wilhelmine died in 1836, and asked her husband, now Grand Duke Ludwig II, to have a simple funeral and to be laid to rest with her beloved Elisabeth.
Sources: L'impératrice Élisabeth, épouse d'Alexandre 1er by Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich, podcast 'Treffpunkt Heilingenberg' #3 'Eine Affäre in der Schweiz', Die Hessin auf dem Zarenthron: Maria, Kaiserin von Russland, http://www.park-rosenhoehe.info/Park_Geschichte.html and https://freunde-des-schlossmuseum-darmstadt.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/flyer_palais.pdf
Thanks to @abigaaal for her feedback on this!
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wosobronze · 9 months
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The article for those who wants to read it:
“Good times never seemed so good,” rang the speakers as England trudged into their post-game centre circle huddle — minus one member.
The lyrics of Sweet Caroline, the song which has serenaded this England team after a win, have never seemed so wrong.
The Lionesses may have beaten Denmark 1-0, virtually securing first place in Group D, but their chances of winning the World Cup took a serious blow at the Sydney Football Stadium on Friday evening.
Keira Walsh, arguably England’s most irreplaceable player, appears to be out of the tournament with serious ligament damage to her left knee.
It is a cruel agony that the Lionesses’ pivot was injured while doing exactly that, intercepting the ball from Kathrine Moller Kuhl in the 36th minute and turning to progress England upfield. In the process, the 26-year-old’s left knee slid across the ground and was caught in the grass.
The first stage of grief is shock. Walsh spent several seconds on all fours, staring at the floor. But the second is denial — and there was none of that.
When team-mates reached her, trying to pull her up, she immediately waved them away. “I’ve done my knee,” she told them.
Their distress was clear to see. Georgia Stanway gave her fellow midfielder a kiss on the forehead as she was stretchered off the pitch. Captain Millie Bright stared into the middle distance, hands on hips.
Right-back Lucy Bronze, Walsh’s partner, wanted to help, carrying equipment for the medical team. In a business where managers are often asked to disassociate themselves from emotion in favour of analysis, it is striking that Sarina Wiegman watched on, allowing her assistants to impart instructions to replacement Laura Coombs.
Sadly, these injuries are all too familiar to Wiegman and the England team. Leah Williamson and Beth Mead are both out of this tournament with torn ACLs. After the match, it was striking to see Chloe Kelly with the shirt of Denmark’s Nicoline Sorensen. Her reason?
“She’s in the ACL crew,” Kelly said, having suffered the same injury in 2021-22. “We were together throughout our journey.” For other countries, stars such as the Netherlands’ Vivianne Miedema, Germany’s Giulia Gwinn, and USWNT pair Christen Press and Catarina Macario have been similarly afflicted. After the match, every England player who was asked denied that the pitch was to blame.
It underscores that none of this is new, though that does not mean it does not hurt. Wiegman denied her players were upset — “We just had to find our feet” — but after the game, several England players expressed their concern. Bronze was not available for an interview, post-match.
Walsh has not yet received an official diagnosis, but the likelihood of this being a serious knee injury is not disputed.
“It looked serious,” said Wiegman. “If you can’t walk off the pitch then it’s serious, but we’ve just finished the game. I haven’t heard anything yet.”
The Lionesses return to their Terrigal base tonight to train for the game against China on Tuesday. Walsh returns for a scan tomorrow.
So far at the 2023 World Cup, England had been searching for something, and, for 30 minutes, they had found it.
Wiegman’s changes were working perfectly — Lauren James was floating infield, opening up space for the recalled Rachel Daly to maraud forward from left-back. James’ presence drew players away from Ella Toone. Alex Greenwood was outstanding at centre-back, shuffled across from the left.
James’ sixth-minute goal meant she was deservedly named player of the match — but those who watch England play know that Walsh is the oil in the engine. No Lioness has played more minutes since the Euros.
After being clogged against Haiti, Walsh was once again finding the passageways through midfield. She has only misplaced eight passes all tournament and only one of her 28 balls against Denmark went astray.
Denmark tasked 20-year-old Arsenal midfielder Kuhl with man-marking her — but Walsh repeatedly gave her the slip.
Update: this is not going well for Kühl.
Wouldn't be surprised if system tweaked at half-time.
Has often taken two players, e.g. Kerr & Fowler for Australia, Mondesir & Dumornay for Haiti.
— Jacob Whitehead (@jwhitey98) July 28, 2023
But after Walsh’s injury, everything changed.
England’s last shot on target came in the 22nd minute through Toone. England had 80.6 per cent possession before Walsh was hurt, along with a 93 per cent field tilt — meaning that they made 93 per cent of the game’s total passes in the final third during that period. As domination goes, it’s rarely more stark.
After Walsh went off, their possession fell to 62.3 per cent and their field tilt to 62.5 per cent. England lost control and were unable to pen Denmark as effectively, with Denmark coach Lars Sondergaard acknowledging the importance of Walsh’s injury post-game. Look at the shift in attacking threat after Walsh’s 36th-minute injury below…
“I feel sorry for England that they lost her, I hope it’s not as bad as it looks,” Sondergaard said. “It could also be a reason why we came back into the game.”
Denmark immediately adjusted, demonstrating how Walsh — the world’s most-expensive female footballer — forces the opposition to play differently.
“We changed our pressing a little bit immediately afterwards and changed to a 4-3-3, where we didn’t have the focus on the defensive midfielder,” Sondegaard replied to a question from The Athletic. “Then we decided at half-time we could play with two strikers that could have different roles and go on pressing Georgia Stanway (who had dropped into the deep midfield role).
“We were fortunate that England got a bit insecure in their passing from behind. In the beginning, they made us run a lot and we had to always close down spaces.”
Now, it is England racing to fill a gap. Denmark adjusted to exploit Walsh’s absence in moments; other teams will do the same. The thought of Germany’s Lena Oberdorf, possibly lying in wait in the quarter-finals, is one to fill England’s midfield with dread.
Pondering how to replace Walsh is like asking whether a hairdryer can replace the wind. Nevertheless, that is the situation England find themselves in.
Wiegman has options in her squad — but Lucy Staniforth, the most natural replacement, flew home on Sunday after only making England’s standby list. Sides are not allowed to call up replacements after the first game.
Coombs, previously a team-mate of Walsh’s at Manchester City, is the oldest player in the side at 32. Having won only six caps, most of those eight years ago, she is inexperienced at this level.
Manchester United’s Katie Zelem and Aston Villa’s Jordan Nobbs are other options. Arsenal coach Jonas Eidevall, a pundit on BBC, says England will have to play two No 6s to replace her.
On Friday evening, Wiegman opted for Coombs, but played her as a No 8, with Stanway pulled back into the deeper role, despite being on a yellow card. Another caution would have seen her receive a one-game ban.
“I thought she did fantastic coming in for Keira,” striker Bethany England said of Coombs post-match. “I thought she held the ball up well, linked well, settled straight into the game and it didn’t look like we were missing anything.”
These are the things team-mates say. Coombs was quiet but did not look out of place. But against the top sides, that concern remains. It was only through Walsh’s player-of-the-match performance that England were able to drag themselves past Germany in last summer’s Euros final.
“Everything came through Keira,” Ellen White, starting striker that match, told the BBC. “There wasn’t a plan B.
“I dreaded to think of the idea of us ever losing her because she was one of our best players. Beth Mead was scoring all the goals but all of our play came through Keira. She was the key cog, everything moved through her.
“I just don’t know who England are going to have now in that No 6, or even potential double No 6 role.”
Wiegman was understandably spiky at the suggestion England were lacking a plan B. For a coach who prides herself on preparation and planning, this situation will have been discussed.
Asked about White’s comments, Wiegman interjected: “You’re talking about the Euros… We’re now in a World Cup. You saw the plan B.”
But merely having a plan B is no guarantee of its success. If this was a blueprint, it would have been locked in a big red box, with large lettering next to it reading: “Only break glass in case of emergency”.
“Beyond Greatness” is the tagline of this tournament, emblazoned in 3D lettering as the players stride onto the pitch. It was beamed onto the big screen as Walsh was stretched off.
Without her, it feels greatness is beyond England.
thank you so much for sending this in!
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femftbllvr · 1 year
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realmadridnews · 8 months
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Real Madrid Femenino squad 2023/2024
Misa Rodriguez
Kenti Robles
Teresa Abelleira
Rocio Galvez
Ivana Andres
Sandie Toletti
Olga Carmona
Maite Oroz
Caroline Weir
Oihane Hernandez
Signe Bruun
Mylene Chavas
Kathellen
Hayley Raso
Caroline Moller
Carla Camacho
Linda Caicedo
Naomie Feller
Claudia Zornoza
Athenea del Castillo
Sofie Svava
Freja Olofsson
Transfer in:
Oihane Hernandez - Athletic Bilbao Femenino
Mylene Chavas - Girondins Bordeaux Femenino
Signe Bruun - Olympique Lyon Femenino
Hayley Raso - Manchester City Femenino
Carla Camacho (promotion) - Real Madrid B Femenino
Transfer out:
Nahikari Garcia - Athletic Bilbao Femenino
Marta Corredera (end of contract) - Levante UD Femenino
Claudia Florentino (end of contract) - free agent
Lorena Navarro (end of contract) - Real Sociedad Femenino
Esther Gonzalez (end of contract) - NJ/NY Gotham FC
Meline Gerard (career end)
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Caroline Møller’s birthday party with Athenea Del Castillo, Maria Pichi (Real Madrid B), Paula Partido (Real Madrid B), Carla Camacho (Real Madrid B) Kathellen Sousa, Freja Siri Olofsson, Caroline Weir, Sofie Svava, Maite Oroz, Lucía Rodríguez and Sofía Fuente (Real Madrid B)
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