Formiga (footballer)

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Formiga
Formiga (08), meio-campista, DSC00910-2012-26-07.jpg
Personal information
Full name Miraildes Maciel Mota[1]
Date of birth (1978-03-03) 3 March 1978 (age 46)
Place of birth Salvador, Bahia, Brazil[2]
Height Script error: No such module "person height".
Position(s) Midfielder
Team information
Current team
São José Esporte Clube
Number 8[4]
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993–1997 São Paulo
1998 Portuguesa
1999 São Paulo
2000–2001 Santa Isabel
2002 Santos
2003 Independente
2004–2005 Malmö FF Dam
2006 New Jersey Wildcats 12 (13)
2007 Jersey Sky Blue 6 (1)
2007 Saad
2008 Botucatu
2009 FC Gold Pride 16 (0)
2010 Chicago Red Stars 23 (0)
2011– São José
International career
1995– Brazil 138[5] (20)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 18:32, 23 June 2015 (UTC)

Miraildes Maciel Mota (born 3 March 1978), commonly known as Formiga (Portuguese: ant), is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a midfielder for São José Esporte Clube. She previously played for professional clubs in Sweden and the United States. Formiga holds many international records as a member of the Brazil women's national football team, being the only player present in all Olympic Games tournaments of women's football since the first edition at the 1996 Summer Olympics, and sharing with Homare Sawa a record six appearances at the FIFA Women's World Cup.

Career

Born in Salvador, Formiga begun playing football at the age of 12. She has cited Dunga, captain of the male Brazilian team that won the 1994 FIFA World Cup as the biggest influence on her playing style.[6]

Formiga played in the Swedish Damallsvenskan as a member of Malmö FF Dam, and for both Santa Isabel and Saad in her homeland of Brazil.[7] Formiga was the first overall pick for the newly inaugurated Women's Professional Soccer (WPS) league in the United States in the 2008 WPS International Draft, selected by FC Gold Pride of Santa Clara, California.[8] Formiga started 15 of her 16 games for Gold Pride in their inaugural season in 2009. The following season, Formiga played for Chicago Red Stars, alongside compatriot Cristiane.[9] In 2011, Formiga returned to her country to play for São José.

International

Formiga first played for Brazilian women's national team at the age of 17, as part of the squad for the 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup, playing as a substitute. The following year, during the inaugural tournament for women's football at the 1996 Summer Olympics, she became a regular starter in the Brazilian team. Formiga and Pretinha were the only two Brazilian players who participated in the first four Olympic Games tournaments of women's football, winning the silver medal in both 2004 and 2008 - both finals lost to the United States.[6] She returned in the 2012 tournament, setting an outright record as the only player present in all five editions of the Olympics tournament.[10]

In the FIFA Women's World Cup, Formiga has appeared in six consecutive tournaments from 1995 to 2015, an achievement matched only by Homare Sawa in women's football,[11] eclipsing the retired Lothar Matthäus and Antonio Carbajal who hold the record of five consecutive appearances in the men's competition.[12] Along the way, Formiga's Brazil reached third place in 1999 and were runners-up to Birgit Prinz's Germany in 2007.[6] Formiga became the competition's oldest goalscorer with a goal against South Korea on 9 June 2015.[13] She was 37 years, three months and six days old.[14]

Formiga also won the gold medal in three editions of the Pan American Games, 2003, 2007 and 2015,[6] and winning the silver in 2011 when Brazil were beaten by Canada.

International goals


Goal
Date
Location Opponent # Score Result Competition
goal 1 1998-03-15 Argentina Mar del Plata  Argentina 1.1

5250.02005 4–0

5450.04005 7–1

Copa America 1998
goal 2 2000-06-20 United States Hershey  Costa Rica 2.1

5250.02005 2–0

5550.05005 8–0

CONCACAF Gold Cup 2000
goal 3 2.2

5350.03005 3–0

goal 4 2003-04-25 Peru Lima  Peru 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 3–0

Copa America 2003
goal 5 2003-04-27 Peru Lima  Colombia 1.1

5250.02005 3–0

5450.04005 12–0

Copa America 2003
goal 6 2003-08-2 Dominican Republic San Cristóbal  Haiti 1.1

5250.02005 3–0

5450.04005 5–0

2003 Pan American Games
goal 7 2003-08-8 Dominican Republic San Cristóbal  Canada 1.1

5250.02005 2–0

5450.04005 5–0

2003 Pan American Games
goal 8 2003-08-14 Dominican Republic San Cristóbal  Canada 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 2–1

2003 Pan American Games
goal 9 2004-08-20 Greece Heraklio  Mexico 2.1

5250.02005 2–0

5550.05005 5–0

Olympics 2004
goal 10 2.2

5350.03005 4–0

goal 11 2007-09-03 China Tianjin  Australia 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 3–2

2007 FIFA Women's World Cup
goal 12 2008-08-18 China Shanghai  Germany 1.1

5250.02005 1–1

5450.04005 4–1

Olympics 2008
goal 13 2012-07-14 Switzerland Chatel-St-Denis  Colombia 1.1

5250.02005 2–1

5450.04005 2–1

2012 Matchworld Women's Cup
goal 14 2012-07-17 Switzerland Chatel-St-Denis  Canada 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 2–1

2012 Matchworld Women's Cup
goal 15 2013-12-22 Brazil Brasilia  Chile 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5550.05005 5–0

Torneio Internacional 2013
goal 16 2014-09-12 Ecuador Loja  Bolivia 2.1

5250.02005 1–0

5550.05005 6–0

Copa América 2014
goal 17 2.2

5350.03005 4–0

goal 18 2014-12-10 Brazil Brasilia  Argentina 2.1

5250.02005 2–0

5550.05005 4–0

Torneio Internacional 2014
goal 19 2.2

5350.03005 4–0

goal 20 2015-06-09 Canada Montreal  South Korea 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 2–0

2015 FIFA Women's World Cup
goal 21 2015-07-11 Canada Toronto  Costa Rica 1.1

5250.02005 3–0

5450.04005 3–0

2015 Pan American Games
goal 22 2015-07-25 Canada Toronto  Colombia 1.1

5250.02005 1–0

5450.04005 4–0

2015 Pan American Games
goal 23 2015-12-01 Brazil Cuiabá  New Zealand 1.1

5250.02005 3–1

5450.04005 5–1

Friendly game
goal 24 2015-12-13 Brazil Natal  Mexico 1.1

5250.02005 5–0

5450.04005 6–0

Torneio Internacional Natal 2015

References

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External links

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