Greta Espinoza

Greta Alejandra Espinoza Casas (born 5 June 1995) is a Mexican footballer who plays as a defender for Mexican club Tigres UANL and the Mexico national team.

Greta Espinoza
Personal information
Full name Greta Alejandra Espinoza Casas[1]
Date of birth (1995-06-05) 5 June 1995[1]
Place of birth Tijuana, Mexico[2]
Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)[1]
Playing position(s) Defender
Club information
Current team
Tigres
Number 4
College career
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2013–2014 Arizona Western
2015–2017 Oregon State 39 (1)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Arizona Strikers FC
2017–2018 Levante 15 (0)
2018– Tigres 46[3] (6)
National team
2012 Mexico U17
2014 Mexico U20
2014– Mexico 21[4] (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 5 May 2020
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 10:22, 18 June 2015 (UTC)

Honors and awards

Club

UANL
gollark: > “This stuff is funny!” giggles your niece, squishing her fingers in the goop. “It’s all warm, gluey, and bouncy! Someone should be turning out this stuff for kids to play with, or as sticky putty to stick posters to walls, or whatever. You’ve got, like, an infinite supply of it, so that’s good economics, right?”
gollark: > “No! ElGr cells are a scientific miracle!” cries biologist Jack Ponta, jiggling a beaker full of purplish goop as he waves his arms in exasperation. “These cells have been a breakthrough; not only in testing cures for cancer, but also in understanding how cancer develops and functions! All these years later, these cells keep chugging along, outliving all the others! Who knows, with these cells, we might even one day unlock a path to immortality! Are you going to let bureaucracy get in the way of SCIENCE?”
gollark: > “We thought my poor grandmother’s remains had been buried in accordance with her wishes,” growls Elizabeth’s direct descendant, Catherine Gratwick. “Can’t you let her rest in peace? This is her body that you’re messing with. You can’t just irradiate and poison her; you must ask me first! How would you like it if your family’s remains were exhumed and mutilated? You must never use cells from deceased people without the explicit pre-mortem consent of the patient or their relatives. As for granny - I insist that all remaining samples of her be buried, and that you financially compensate her family for the pain and grief you have caused!”
gollark: > Two generations ago, scientists took a biopsy of a tumor from a cancer patient named Elizabeth Gratwick, who died soon after. Without her knowledge or consent, these cells were preserved in the laboratory and proved to be exceptionally stable in replication. As stable cancer cell lines are highly useful for medical research, “ElGr cells” have been sent to and used by scientists all over the world. However, objections are now being raised by Elizabeth’s descendants.
gollark: Now I need to answer a question!

References


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