Of those teams, only one has been in the league uninterrupted since: Solihull. Oxford University has at various points be told they can't play league hockey and have left and rejoined the league several times, and now play in the university leagues. (In the 1990s the governing body didn't want two teams playing out of the same rink but eventually relented so that in the late 1990s and early 2000s Oxford University and Oxford city both played in the league). Cambridge University had a non-league team for a long time. After the Ravens folded, a new team, the Penguins, was set up in Peterborough. Streatham Strickers folded in the early 1990s but a new Streatham team, Streatham Storm formed in 1996, re-entering the league in 1997 and remaining active ever since.
League structure
In England and Wales, 28 teams play in the British Women's Leagues. The top 6 teams in the country play in the Elite League, with a Premier league consisting of 8 teams, and below that two unequally sized divisions, split by north (consisting of 4 teams) and south (consisting of 9 teams).
In the Premier Division, the sides play each other, one home, once away, with the team ranked highest being declared champion of the league and promoted to the Elite League.
At the end of the season, the top four Premier sides and top three Division One sides from each region converge for the 'Trophy Weekend'. The Premier Sides play for the Chairman's Cup, while the Division One sides play for the Division One Trophy.
In addition to the playoffs, there is promotion and relegation between the Elite, Premier, and Division 1 leagues. In 2004/05, this was decided with a Playoff Weekend at Coventry. The Division One sides played first in a one-off game; the following day the winner of that game played the 10th ranked team in the Premier league, to decide who played in the Premier and Division 1 leagues for the following season.
In 2007–08 season the EIHA introduced women's U16 teams to the league structure. Three teams (Oxford, Streatham and Bracknell) were created in a Southern Division and four teams were created in the women's U16 Northern Division. For 2008–09, Oxford folded and was replaced by Peterborough in the South.
In 2022 the naming of the league was changed to:
Elite
WNIHL1
WNIHL2
(the above information with Elite, Premier and Division 1 is now out of date and needs to be rewritten)
Early history
Formation of the Women's English League
In the 1980s ice hockey was exclusively a male sport in the UK. Many ice skaters who wanted to start playing ice hockey were turned away at clubs being told that girls can't play ice hockey.
In Streatham, Sue Parsons was told just that. But instead of giving up, she fought hard to be allowed to play. She wrote to the British Ice Hockey association, but received no reply. She gathered a petition with lists of female players who wanted to play, and hand delivered it to the British Ice Hockey association, but again received no reply.
Meanwhile, in Oxford University, Deborah Coyne set up the first women's ice hockey team, and persuaded Cambridge to do the same and in 1982 they held the first women's Varsity game between Oxford and Cambridge. Sue Parsons and her friend Kate Quirrey actually played as the goalies in that first game, as neither Oxford nor Cambridge had a goalie. They became close friends of Debbie and all three worked hard to get the league set up.
A reporter from ITV advised Parsons to go to the Sports Council of Great Britain. they agreed to meet her and she showed them all the evidence that women wanted to play ice hockey and that they were actively playing hockey. The Sports Council of Great Britain then invited her to a second meeting, and also in attendance was the British Ice Hockey Association. The representative of the Sports Council delivered the message that the British Ice Hockey Association were not going to get any more funding until they included women in their programme.
In the early days, many of the women didn't have any kit, so would wear rolled up magazines down their socks and would be sharing and swapping helmets on the bench during games. Parsons went to other rinks to drum up interest in the game and encourage other women's teams to form.
The other early challenge was that there were no women's coaches, but you needed a qualified coach to be allowed to play. Some really supportive men were happy to help the women's teams despite often getting flack from their male counterparts in their own teams. And the early teams were really grateful for the male allies who helped them.
1986
Set up of first Women's England Team. (More information needed)
Below is a list of the winners of the major competitions. The team's standing is shown in win–loss–tie format.
Women's English League
1987/88 - Streatham Strikers (10-1-1)
1986/87 - Oxford University Blues (12-0-0)
1985/86 - Streatham Strikers (11-1-0)
1984/85 - Peterborough Ravens (8-0-0)
The Women's England League was the first incarnation of the league, starting with five teams before moving up to seven by 1988. An influx of interest from new teams resulted in a complete regionalisation of the sport, a system that lasted two years.
Regionalised British League
Overall champion
1989/90 - no official champion*
1988/89 - Oxford City Rockets (beat Streatham Strikers 3–1 in final game)
Oxford City Rockets declared unofficial champions after beating Streatham in a regional playoff by four goals to one. Rockets were never able to play the final against Sunderland (champions of the Northern Division).
Northern Division
1989/90 - Sunderland Scorpions (6–1–1)
1988/89 - Sunderland Scorpions (4–0–2)
Central Division
1989/90 - Oxford City Rockets (12–0–0)
1988/89 - Oxford City Rockets (10–0–0)
Capital/South Division
1989/90 - Streatham Strikers (8–0–0)
1988/89 - Streatham Strikers (10–0–0)
After two years of this format, the system switched to the structure that exists to the present day, making it after 15 years one of the longest lasting formats of any ice hockey league that ever has been in the UK.
The Trophy Weekend has been split into the Bill Britton Memorial Trophy and D1 Trophy. The Memorial Trophy sees 1st vs 4th and 2nd vs 3rd in the Premier League, with the winners playing the final the following day.
Prior to the Memorial Trophy being renamed, it was called the Chairman's Cup.
The D1 Trophy sees the Champion of the North playing the runner-up of the South, and Champion of the South vs runner-up of the North, with the winners playing the final the following day.
The introduction of the Women's U16 Northern and Southern (season 2007/08) created a third play-off final between the winners of each league.
Information on these playoffs is sketchy; however, the following contains most of them. Playoffs were not held in every season due to either team's not wanting to go for promotion to the higher league, or a natural expansion of the Premier League.
The Knockout Cup was proposed to allow teams of different standard to play each other, and also to increase the number of competitions played in the women's game.
2002/2003 - Bracknell Queen Bees bt Swindon Top Cats (4–1)
Regional/national/international sides
In the UK, there are five sides that play at regional, national and international levels.
Regional level
England is divided into two regional sides, featuring the best players who have not been selected for Team Great Britain. The regional sides are a recent addition to assist with the development of the top women's and girls' hockey in the UK. For the purposes of the records shown, only games against other regional, national or international teams shall be considered.
In addition, the conference sections are divided into Senior and Junior (U16) teams.
North of England Senior: 1–2
North of England Junior: 1–1
South of England Senior: 1–1
South of England Junior: 1–1
National teams
In total there are three national teams, although Team England has been defunct since 2002. 2006 saw the England team reinstated and an Under 16 England added to the list of national teams. In August 2006 both teams travelled to Prague for a training camp, followed by a tournament in Pilzen which saw the Senior Team play their way to a silver medal.
Details of all Home Internationals known are shown below:
Saturday, 25 June 2005 - Team Wales 4 - 0 Team Scotland @ Cardiff
Saturday, 10 April 2004 - Team Scotland 0 - 7 Team Wales @ Paisley
Saturday, 18 May 2002 - Team England 1 - 4 Team Wales @ Nottingham
Saturday, 30 January 1993 - Team England 7 - 0 Team Scotland @ Sheffield
Saturday, 16 May 1992 - Team England 3 - 1 Team Scotland @ Nottingham
Saturday, 28 December 1991 - Team Scotland 1 - 1 Team England @ Murrayfield
The overall records of the teams are therefore:
Team England : 2–1–1
Team Scotland : 0–4–1
Team Wales : 3–0–0
Team GB
Team Great Britain is the national side that represents the UK in firstly the European Championships followed by the IIHF World Championships.
Below is a guide to GB's performances year by year. Only 'competitive' games (challenge matches ignored) are counted for the records.
1989
Team GB re-entered the world of international Hockey with a European Championship two-leg qualifying match against the Netherlands in Chelmsford. GB battled hard in both games but were defeated by an experienced Dutch side, winning both games by the margin of four goals to two, giving the Dutch an 8–4 aggregate win and a place in the European Championship.
Overall record: 0–2–0
1990
No official competitions existed; however, GB defeated the Dutch in Amsterdam 1–0 in a challenge match.
1991
Team GB took part in the 1991 European Championship finishing 9th out of 10 teams. Placed in a very tough Group B, they lost their first three games to Sweden (0–16), Denmark (0–4) and Germany (0–6) before surprising the Czech Republic with a 2–2 draw in their final game. GB finished bottom of their group, and played Holland in the 9th/10th playoff which they won 3–0.
Record: 1–3–1
1993
After the break for an Olympic year, GB started again in the newly formed European Championship Pool B. Following an opening loss against Latvia (0–3), GB repeated their performance against the Czech Republic from two years previous, this time with a 1–1 draw. France dispatched GB easily in the third game by 7 goals to 2, and GB won their first international game in the final match of the tournament with a 1–0 win over Ukraine. giving GB a 4th place finish out of five teams, with GB only missing a medal by one point.
Record: 1–2–1
1995
GB went to Denmark for the IIHF European Women's Championships Pool B in March 1995, faced a tough group on paper and proved to be a tough group on ice. GB fell to their worst defeat in four years in the opening game with a 14–1 defeat to Denmark. Slovakia defeated GB 4–1 and in the final group game Holland put seven past the Brits, with only two coming back.
The 7th/8th playoff game saw GB take on Ukraine, the only side they had beaten in competitive hockey so far. Ukraine skated to a 2–0 victory which saw GB finish 8th out of eight teams.
Record: 0–4–0
Team roster:
Gill Barton – Guildford
Julie Biles – Guildford
Verity Boome – Guildford
Laura Bugbee – Slough
Sarah Burton – Swindon
Rachael Cotton – Bracknell
Lisa Davies – Bracknell
Lynsey Emmerson – Sunderland
Fiona Johnstone – Swindon
Fiona King – Guildford
Teresa Lewis – Sunderland
Julie Lossnitzer – Slough
Jane McLelland – Sunderland
Jeanette Mountjoy – Bracknell
Sarah Musgrove – Telford
Kathy Nike – Bracknell
Kim Strongman – Guildford
Laura Urquhart – Slough
Louise Wheeler – Slough
Manager – Anne Sheppard. Head Coach – Mike Urquhart. Asst Coaches – Charlie Colon and Paul O'Higgins.
1996
A trip to Slovakia was in store for GB in Pool B in 1996. GB started positively with a much better account against Denmark who they had been routed against the previous year falling only to a 5–0 defeat. Any hopes of a great comeback were dashed in their second game against the Danes who GB had previously done well against, collapsing to a 7–1 defeat. That scoreline was repeated in the final group round game against the Dutch to leave GB adrift at the bottom of their group.
The 7th/8th playoff saw GB take on Kazakhstan and for the first time in the tournament. Kazakhstan was just able to edge ahead and won by the odd goal in 9 leaving GB in 8th out of eight place and without a win in two years.
Record: 0–4–0
Team roster:
Gill Barton – Guildford
Julie Biles – Guildford
Verity Boome – Peterborough
Becky Bowles – Bracknell
Sarah Burton – Swindon
Laura Byrne – Oxford
Rachael Cotton – Bracknell
Lisa Davies – Bracknell
Lynsey Emmerson – Sunderland
Fiona King – Guildford
Teresa Lewis – Sunderland
Jane McLelland – Sunderland
Jeanette Mountjoy – Bracknell
Claire Pannell – Bracknell
Debbie Palmer – Swindon
Nicola Pattinson – Sunderland
Cheryl Smith – Sunderland
Michelle Smith – Sunderland
Kim Strongman – Guildford
Laura Urquhart – Sunderland
Elaine Whitney – Telford
1999
Székesfehérvár, Hungary
Following a re-structure in the World Championships, and no championship in 1998 due to it being an Olympic year, GB finally came back into the new Pool B Qualifying Group to decide the final spot in Pool B for the following year.
Great Britain opened brightly holding Italy to a 1–1 draw after 40 minutes in the opening game before Italy stepping the game up a gear to skate out to a 4–1 victory; however, the signs looked good. The next game was against South Africa, which ended to be a sporting contest on the opening puck drop with GB running up their highest ever victory at international level with a 22–0 victory.
After a slow start in the final game GB hit the host team Hungary hard with five quick goals in a match that ended up as 9–1 to the Brits, leaving them to finish 2nd out of four teams.
Record: 2–1–0
Team roster:
Natalie Arthur – Backburn
Zoe Bayne – Billinghham
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Vicky Burton – Bracknell
Laura Byrne – Bracknell
Louise Fisher – Slough
Amy Johnson – Haringey
Fiona King – Guildford
Teresa Lewis – Basingstoke
Claire Oldfield – Whitley Bay
Ceri Powell – Solihull
Tasmin Quinn – Basingstoke
Vicky Robbins – Guildford
Cheryl Smith – Slough
Michelle Smith – Slough
Tonia Scialdone – Solihull
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Louise Wheeler – Slough
Manager – Teresa Fisher. Coaches – Mike Urquhart, Laura Urquhart and David Graham.
2000
Székesfehérvár, Hungary
It was back to Hungary in 2000, for the Pool B Qualifying Tournament. GB again had a strong start with the Brits 1–1 against the Group Favorites DPR Korea in their first game. Korea struck back with two 2nd period goals but despite a fightback by GB, the game ended up 4–2 to the Asian side.
Australia were next up for GB and were comfortably dispatched by seven goals to one. GB finally defeated Holland in a competitive game, 11 years after their first attempt with a comfortable 5–2 victory. GB again finished second out of four teams in their group.
Belgium, who finished second in the other group, took on GB in the 3rd/4th place playoff. GB comfortably dispatched the Belgians by 8 goals to 1 which saw GB ranked overall third out of eight teams.
Record: 3–1–0
Team roster:
Natalie Arthur – Blackburn
Zoe Bayne – Billingham
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Vicky Burton – Bracknell
Laura Byrne – Bracknell
Samantha Cheetham – Bracknell
Louise Fisher – Slough
Susan Hemmerman – Kingston
Amy Johnson – Swindon
Fiona King – Guildford
Claire Oldfield – Whitley Bay
Debbie Palmer – Swindon
Vicky Robbins – Guildford
Tonia Scialdone – Nottingham
Cheryl Smith – Nottingham
Michelle Smith – Nottingham
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Louise Wheeler – Slough
Manager – Teresa Fisher. Head Coach – Laura Urquhart.
2001
Maribor, Slovenia
Pool B overnight was renamed Division 1, but apart from that the challenge stayed the same for GB with their third straight attempt at qualification into the 2nd tier.
GB looked to their first game against hosts Slovenia to set the standard for the tournament and they did not disappoint. 5–0 up after 20 minutes, they went on to win 12–0. Hungary also fell to a GB by 12 goals to 0 in Game 2, and with GB dispatching the Aussies by 4–2 in Game 3 they were left in the pleasant situation of played 3, won 3, scored 28, conceded 2.
Slovakia took on GB in the final game. Despite getting a goal back in the 3rd, Team GB went down to a 4–1 defeat against Slovakia and finished second in their group for the third consecutive year.
Record: 3–1–0
Team roster:
Natalie Arthur – Blackburn
Zoe Bayne – Billingham
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Laura Burke – Sheffield
Vicky Burton – Bracknell
Laura Byrne – Bracknell
Louise Fisher – Guildford
Susan Hemmerman – Kingston
Amy Johnson – Bracknell
Fiona King – Guildford
Teresa Lewis – Sunderland
Rachel McCabe – Billingham
Claire Oldfield – Whitley Bay
Vicky Robbins – Guildford
Tonia Scialdone – Birmingham
Cheryl Smith – Nottingham
Michelle Smith – Nottingham
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Louise Wheeler – Slough
Gillian Wyatt – Kingston
Manager – Alison McCabe, Head Coach – Tony Hall. Assistant Coach – Reg Wilcox.
2002
Hull, UK
An Olympic year saw no official hockey taking place, but the IIHF hosted a women's challenge tri-series between Italy, Belgium and GB, held in Hull.
GB beat Belgium, but fell to Italy to finish second in the three team group.
Team roster:
Zoe Bayne – Billingham
Kirstin Beattie – Murrayfield
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Verity Boome – Slough
Heather Brunning – Bracknell
Laura Burke – Sheffield
Vicky Burton – Bracknell
Louise Fisher – Guildford
Alex von Haselberg – Guildford
Susan Hemmerman – Kingston
Fiona King – Guildford
Alice Lamb – Slough
Claire Oldfield – Whitley Bay
Vicky Robbins – Guildford
Tonia Scialdone – Birmingham
Angela Taylor – Paisley
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Gemma Watt – Paisley
Gillian Wyatt – Kingston
Hannah Young – Guildford
Manager – Alison McCabe. Head Coach – Tony Hall. Assistant Coach – Reg Wilcox.
2003
Lecco, Italy
The tea were off to Italy for Division 2, which now sported six teams in direct parity with the men's game for the first time.
GB collapsed to the worst possible start against longtime foes Slovakia. 5–0 down after the first period, they ended up losing 8–1 to the Eastern Bloc side. Game 2 against group favourites Norway was just as tough for the Brits along a spirited performance saw them just 1–0 down after the first GB collapsed to an 8–3 defeat.
Game 3 against Denmark saw a pulsating clash from end to end which saw GB register their first points with a 4–4 draw; however, after leading the Danes were 1–0 at the end of the 1st. The Netherlands, a long term bogey team of the Brits, skated to a 4–2 win over GB. GB's final game against Italy proved too much for them and they were defeated as they had been the previous year to an experienced Italian side, this time 4–2.
GB were relegated, or so was thought. However, due to the SARS pandemic in China the World Championships were cancelled for that year and the IIHF did not relegate any teams from any divisions, effectively rescuing GB from relegation.
Record: 0–4–1
Team roster:
Zoe Bayne – Sheffield
Kirstin Beattie – Murrayfield
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Verity Boome – Slough
Heather Brunning – Bracknell
Laura Burke – Sheffield
Vicky Burton – Bracknell
Lynsey Emmerson – Sunderland
Alex von Haselberg – Guildford
Fiona King – Guildford
Teresa Lewis – Sunderland
Eleanor Maitland – Kilmarnock
Ami Merrick – Cardiff
Claire Oldfield – Sunderland
Vicky Robbins – Basingstoke
Angela Taylor – Paisley
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Gemma Watt – Paisley
Gillian Wyatt – Kingston
Hannah Young – Guildford
Manager – Ian Turner. Head Coach – Tony Hall. Assistant Coach – Reg Wilcox.
2004
Vipiteno-Sterzing, Italy
From a standings point of view, the 2004 saw GB's worst ever performance in international ice hockey, with defeats to Denmark, Italy, Slovakia, the Netherlands and Australia.
However, when a team is washed out a goal on a wraparound due to the referee 'losing sight of the puck' as it went round the net, there is not much to be done. GB battled desperately hard under some of the worst refereeing ever seen in an international competition.
GB were relegated to Division 3 along with Australia.
Record: 0–5–0
Team roster:
Zoe Bayne – Sheffield
Kirstin Beattie – Murrayfield
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Lynsey Emmerson – Sheffield
Louise Fisher – Guildford
Lauren Halliwell – Kingston
Alex von Haselberg – Guildford
Kelly Herring – Peterborough
Becky Kasner – Whitley Bay
Fiona King – Guildford
Eleanor Maitland – Kilmarnock
Ami Merrick – Cardiff
Claire Oldfield – Sunderland
Vicky Robbins – Basingstoke
Helen Stowe – Sunderland
Angela Taylor – Pailsey
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Gemma Watt – Sunderland
Katherine Wiggins – Guildford
Gillian Wyatt – Sheffield
Hannah Young – Guildford
Manager – Ian Turner. Head Coach – Reg Wilcox. Assistant Coach – Jo Abbs
2005
Cape Town, South Africa
Division III was the setting for GB. GB started off the tournament in impressive fashion easily dispatching Hungary 5–0 followed by an 11–0 demolition of Belgium.
GB's minds were however firmly planted on the 3rd game, without a doubt the title decider. GB went a goal down at 26:56 before Newcastle's Teresa Lewis opened the account for GB on the half hour mark.
With the scores neatly tied at 1 heading into the final period, GB battled hard. University of New Hampshire's Angela Taylor picked up a penalty for highsticking at 47:39, and with eight seconds left in the game heartbreak as Slovenia took the lead. GB were never able to get back in the game and ended losing 4–1 with the final goal placed into the empty net.
Game 4 saw GB take out their frustrations of the previous game with a 19–0 victory over South Africa, who were saved relegation by the IIHF Women's Committee as they expanded the Elite competition to nine teams, and thus no teams were relegated this time around.
Game 5 saw GB finally lay the ghost of a year ago with a 6–2 victory over Australia to ensure GB's 2nd place finish.
Record: 4–1–0
Team Roster:
Zoe Bayne – Sheffield
Kirstin Beattie – Murrayfield
Nicola Bicknell – Slough
Laura Burke – Sheffield
Lynsey Emmerson – Sunderland
Louise Fisher – Guildford
Lauren Halliwell – Kingston
Kelly Herring – Slough
Becky Kasner – Whitley Bay
Beth Kavanagh – Flintshire
Fiona King – Guildford
Alice Lamb – Slough
Claire Oldfield – Sunderland
Vicky Robbins – Basingstoke
Angela Taylor – Paisley
Emily Turner – Sheffield
Katherine Wiggins – Guildford
Gillian Wyatt – Sheffield
Laura Urquhart – Nottingham
Teresa Lewis – Sunderland
Manager: Ian Turner, Head Coach: Reg Wilcox. Assistant Coach: Jo Abbs
Overall record
GB's all time competitive international record stands at: 14–28–3
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Welsh political cartoonist and illustrator Leslie IllingworthIllingworth in retirementBornLeslie Gilbert Illingworth(1902-09-02)2 September 1902Barry, WalesDied20 December 1979(1979-12-20) (aged 77)Hastings, EnglandKnown for Editorial cartoon Drawing Leslie Gilbert Illingworth (2 September 1902 – 20 December 1979) was a Welsh political cartoonist best known for his work for the Daily Mail and for becoming the chief cartoonist at the British satirical periodical Punch.[1] E...
حصن النزارمعلومات عامةنوع المبنى قلعة محصنةالمكان منطقة المدينةالبلد السعوديةالمدينة محافظة خيبرتعديل - تعديل مصدري - تعديل ويكي بيانات حصن النزار هو حصن بناه اليهود في خيبر شمال المدينة المنورة، وانتهى باستيلاء المسلمين عليه في غزوة خيبر. يعد الحصن من أكبر القلاع مس�...
Venus de Milo di Museum Louvre Sejarah seni adalah sebuah studi untuk mempelajari perkembangan seni dan konteks gayanya. Termasuk diantaranya genre, desain, format dan gaya seni.[1] Hal ini termasuk diantaranya mempelajari seni dalam aliran yang utama seperti lukisan, patung, dan arsitektur. Beberapa seni dalam aliran yang lebih kecil seperti seni keramik, furnitur, dan seni dekorasi lainnya juga dipelajari dalam sejarah seni. Sejarah seni mencakup beberapa metode untuk mempelajari se...
Historical treatises or notable writings on tea and tea brewing. This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (March 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Tea classicsLu Yu: The Classic of TeaChinese nameTraditional Chinese茶書Simplified Chinese茶书TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu Pinyinchá s...
Long strip of naturally occurring land for recreation Promenade Plantée, a 4.7 km (2.9 mi) elevated linear park built on top of obsolete railway infrastructure in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, France. Plan of the Emerald Necklace, Boston, US, in 1894 A linear park is a type of park that is significantly longer than it is wide.[a][full citation needed] These linear parks are strips of public land running along canals, rivers, streams, defensive walls, electrical ...
Cet article traite de l'équipe masculine. Pour l'équipe féminine, voir Équipe du Costa Rica féminine de football. Équipe du Costa Rica Généralités Confédération CONCACAF Couleurs Rouge, bleu et blanc Surnom Los TicosLa SeleLa Tricolor Stade principal Stade national du Costa Rica Classement FIFA 46e (26 octobre 2023)[1] Personnalités Sélectionneur Vacant Capitaine Keylor Navas Plus sélectionné Celso Borges (163) Meilleur buteur Rolando Fonseca (46) Rencontres officielles histor...
Tribe of earless seals Monk seals Hawaiian monk seal (top) and Mediterranean monk seal (bottom) Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Carnivora Clade: Pinnipedia Family: Phocidae Subfamily: Monachinae Tribe: MonachiniScheffer, 1958 Species Monachus monachus Neomonachus schauinslandi †Neomonachus tropicalis Hawaiian monk seal range Mediterranean monk seal range Monk seals are earless seals of the tribe Monachini. They are the on...
Voce principale: SC Rot-Weiß Oberhausen-Rhld. 1904. SC Rot-Weiß Oberhausen-Rhld. 1904Stagione 2020-2021Sport calcio Squadra RW Oberhausen Allenatore Mike Terranova (1ª, 9ª-13ª, 15ª-34ª, 36ª-42ª) Dimitrios Pappas (2ª-8ª) All. in seconda Dirk Langerbein Regionalliga7º posto Maggiori presenzeCampionato: Kreyer (39)Totale: Kreyer (39) Miglior marcatoreCampionato: Kreyer (14)Totale: Kreyer (14) StadioNiederrheinstadion Maggior numero di spettatori1 000 vs. Borussia Möncheng...