Pu Wei: Difference between revisions

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! No. !! Date !! Venue !! Opponent !! Score !! Result !! Competition
! No. !! Date !! Venue !! Opponent !! Score !! Result !! Competition
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| 1. || 23 January 2002 || [[Huadu Stadium]], [[Guangzhou]], [[China]] || {{fbw|GER}} || align=center|'''2'''–0 || align=center| 2–1 || [[2002 Four Nations Tournament (women's football)|2002 Four Nations Tournament]]
| 1. || 30 June 1999 || [[CEFCU Stadium]], [[San Jose, California|San Jose]], [[United States]] || {{fbw|RUS}} || align=center|'''1'''–0 || align=center| 2–0 || [[1999 FIFA Women's World Cup]]
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| 2. || 13 June 2003 || [[Nakhon Sawan Province Stadium]], [[Nakhon Sawan]], [[Thailand]] || {{fbw|UZB}} || align=center|'''8'''–0 || align=center| 8–0 || [[2003 AFC Women's Championship]]
| 2. || 23 January 2002 || [[Huadu Stadium]], [[Guangzhou]], [[China]] || {{fbw|GER}} || align=center|'''2'''–0 || align=center| 2–1 || [[2002 Four Nations Tournament (women's football)|2002 Four Nations Tournament]]
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| 3. || 13 June 2003 || [[Nakhon Sawan Province Stadium]], [[Nakhon Sawan]], [[Thailand]] || {{fbw|UZB}} || align=center|'''8'''–0 || align=center| 8–0 || [[2003 AFC Women's Championship]]
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| 4. || 20 November 2012 || [[Shenzhen Stadium]], [[Shenzhen]], China || {{fbw|HKG}} || align=center|'''3'''–0 || align=center| 6–0 || [[2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup]]
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| 3. || 20 November 2012 || [[Shenzhen Stadium]], [[Shenzhen]], China || {{fbw|HKG}} || align=center|'''3'''–0 || align=center| 6–0 || [[2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup]]
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Revision as of 14:07, 14 September 2022

Pu Wei (simplified Chinese: 浦玮; traditional Chinese: 浦瑋; pinyin: Pǔ Wěi; born August 20, 1980 in Shanghai) is a retired female Chinese football (soccer) player. A veteran of three World Cup tournaments and three Olympics, Pu Wei competed in USA 1999, USA 2003, China 2007, Sydney 2000 Olympics, Athens 2004 Olympics, and Beijing 2008; as China did not qualify for Germany 2011 World Cup and London 2012 Olympics. Until 2013, Pu was the captain of China women's national football team. She retired after a friendly with North Korea on February 15, 2014.

Olympics and World Cup

Pu Wei finished fifth with the Chinese team at Sydney 2000 Olympics, playing all three matches. Four years later she finished ninth with the Chinese team at Atlanta 2004 Olympics, playing two matches. At Beijing 2008 Olympics, USA 2003 and China 2007 World Cup tournaments, she reached the quarter-finals with her Chinese team. Her best performance, as a member of China women's national team, is reaching the final of USA 1999 women's world cup, losing in penalty-shoot-out.

Pu had a total of 219 caps for China, one of the most capped players in Chinese history. She was given a retirement ceremony by the Chinese Football Association, the first such honour given to a football player. She was awarded a ceremonial jersey numbered "219", signalling the number of appearances she had as a member of the national football team.[1]

International goals

No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 30 June 1999 CEFCU Stadium, San Jose, United States  Russia 1–0 2–0 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup
2. 23 January 2002 Huadu Stadium, Guangzhou, China  Germany 2–0 2–1 2002 Four Nations Tournament
3. 13 June 2003 Nakhon Sawan Province Stadium, Nakhon Sawan, Thailand  Uzbekistan 8–0 8–0 2003 AFC Women's Championship
4. 20 November 2012 Shenzhen Stadium, Shenzhen, China  Hong Kong 3–0 6–0 2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup

References

  1. ^ "浦玮退役最后的玫瑰再见 219场经典定格世界杯留憾". Sina Sports. February 15, 2014.

External links