2014 FFA Cup

The 2014 FFA Cup was the inaugural season of the FFA Cup, the main national soccer knockout cup competition in Australia. 631 teams in total from around Australia entered the competition. Only 32 teams competed in the competition proper (Round of 32), including the 10 A-League teams and 22 Football Federation Australia (FFA) member federation teams determined through individual state preliminary rounds held in early 2014 (and 2013 in the case of the ACT). The FFA Cup competition proper commenced on 29 July 2014 and concluded with the FFA Cup Final on 16 December 2014. which was brought forward from Australia Day in order to avoid a clash with the 2015 Asian Cup, which was hosted by Australia.

The winner of the FFA Cup received $50,000 as part of a total prize money pool of $131,450.

Round and dates

Prize fund

Preliminary rounds

621 FFA member federations teams competed in various state-based preliminary rounds to win one of 22 places in the competition proper (Round of 32). Eight of the nine FFA member federations took part in the tournament, the exception being Northern Territory, which is expected to start participating from the 2015–16 season. Player registration numbers in each jurisdiction was used to determine the number of qualifying teams for each member federation:

FFT Eurotrainer 2000

The FFA 2000, FFT Eurotrainer 2000, Eurotrainer 2000 is a low wing two seat training aircraft developed by Gyroflug. A prototype was tested and displayed throughout Europe, but the project was canceled.

Development

The Eurotrainer 2000 was developed as a modern low cost trainer for military and civilian pilots developed from AS-202 metal design. The first launch customer was to be Swissair. FFT went out of business in 1992 with one prototype produced.

Design

The aircraft is a four seat, retractable tricycle gear design. The fuselage and wings are all composite construction. The landing gear uses a trailing link layout.

Operational history

The prototype has been displayed in Paris, France in 1991 at Le Bourget airfield.

Variants

Specifications (FFT Eurotrainer 2000)

Data from Flight International

General characteristics

  • Capacity: 4
  • Length: 8.10 m (26 ft 7 in)
  • Wingspan: 10.4 m (34 ft 1 in)
  • Width: 1.15 m (3 ft 9 in)
  • Height: 3.2 m (10 ft 6 in)
  • Wing area: 14 m2 (150 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 920 kg (2,028 lb)
  • Final Fantasy Type-0

    Final Fantasy Type-0 (Japanese: ファイナルファンタジー零式 Hepburn: Fainaru Fantajī Reishiki) is an action role-playing game developed and published by Square Enix for the PlayStation Portable (PSP). Released in Japan on October 27, 2011, Type-0 is part of the Fabula Nova Crystallis subseries, a set of games sharing a common mythos which includes Final Fantasy XIII and Final Fantasy XV. The gameplay, similar to Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII, has the player taking control of characters in real-time combat during missions across Orience. The player also engages in large-scale strategy-based battles on the world map, and has access to a multiplayer option during story missions and side quests.

    The story focuses on Class Zero, a group of fourteen students from the Vermillion Peristylium, a magical academy in the Dominion of Rubrum. When the Militesi Empire launches an assault on the other Crystal States of Orience, seeking to control their respective crystals, Class Zero is mobilized for the defense of Rubrum. Eventually, the group becomes entangled in the secrets behind both the war and the reason for their existence. The setting and presentation were inspired by historical documentaries, and the story itself was written to be darker than other Final Fantasy titles.

    FFA

    FFA may refer to:

    Aviation and military

  • First Flight Airport, IATA code for the tiny airstrip in Kitty Hawk where the first flight occurred in 1903
  • Free-fire area or Free-fire zone, in U.S. military parlance, a fire-control measure
  • Flug- und Fahrzeugwerke Altenrhein, a Swiss aircraft and railway vehicle manufacturer
  • Feldflieger Abteilung, the initial (1914–18) field aviation aerial reconnaissance units of the German army's air service in World War I
  • Organizations

  • Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency, an organisation to manage Pacific tuna resources
  • Ferrara Fire Apparatus, a builder of fire trucks and other emergency vehicles
  • National FFA Organization, an American youth organization formerly known as Future Farmers of America
  • Sport

  • Fédération française d'athlétisme, the governing body for the sport of athletics in France
  • Football Federation Australia, the governing body of association football in Australia
  • Football Federation of Armenia, the governing body of association football in Armenia
  • Cup

    A cup is a small open container used for drinking and carrying drinks. It may be made of wood, plastic, glass, clay, metal, stone, china or other materials, and may have a stem, handles or other adornments. Cups are used for drinking across a wide range of cultures and social classes, and different styles of cups may be used for different liquids or in different situations.

    Cups have been used for thousands of years for the purpose of carrying food and drink, as well as for decoration. They may also be used in certain cultural rituals and to hold objects not intended for drinking such as coins.

    Types

    Names for different types of cups vary regionally and may overlap. Any transparent cup, regardless of actual composition, is likely to be called a "glass"; therefore, while a cup made of paper is a "paper cup", a transparent one for drinking shots is called a "shot glass", instead.

    Cups for hot beverages

    While in theory, most cups are well suited to hold drinkable liquids, hot drinks like tea are generally served in either insulated cups or porcelain teacups.

    Cup (disambiguation)

    A cup is any of a variety of drinkware used to consume food or beverage.

    Cup or cups may also refer to:

    Cooking

  • Cup (unit), a legal unit of volume and measure: in the USA and Liberia
  • Cups, a type of traditional English punch
  • Measuring cup, a measuring instrument for liquids and powders, used primarily in cooking
  • Clothing

  • The cup of a bra, the part that covers the breasts
  • A protective cup in a jockstrap designed to protect the male genitalia
  • Mathematics, science, and technology

  • Silphium perfoliatum or "Cup-plant", a member of the sunflower family, native to North America
  • The cup product in algebraic topology, denoted by the operator \smile
  • Common Unix Printing System, commonly known as CUPS, a Unix print server
  • Copper units of pressure, a type of chamber pressure measurement in firearms
  • The cups of an anemometer
  • Music

  • "Cups" (song), a song recorded by Anna Kendrick
  • "Cups", a 1999 single by Underworld composed by Darren Emerson, Karl Hyde, Rick Smith, Underworld from the album Beaucoup Fish
  • "Cups", a 2000 song by Roy Nathanson and Debbie Harry from Fire at Keaton's Bar and Grill
  • Cup (unit)

    The cup is a unit of measurement for volume, used in cooking to measure liquids (fluid measurement) and bulk foods such as granulated sugar (dry measurement). It is principally used in the United States and Liberia where it is a legally defined unit of measurement. Actual cups used in a household in any country may differ from the cup size used for recipes; standard measuring cups, often calibrated in fluid measure and weights of usual dry ingredients as well as in cups, are available.

    Metric cup

    Some countries in the Commonwealth of Nations, notably Australia and New Zealand, define a metric cup of 250 millilitres. Units such as metric cups and metric feet are derived from the metric system but are not official metric units

    A "coffee cup" is 1.5 dl or 150 millilitres or 5.07 US customary fluid ounces, and is occasionally used in recipes. It is also used in the US to specify coffeemaker sizes (what can be referred to as a Tasse à café). A "12-cup" US coffeemaker makes 57.6 US customary fluid ounces of coffee, or 6.8 metric cups of coffee.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Blue Glass Highway

    by: Vacabou

    I dreamt (that) I was driving away on a blue glass highway
    I knew that this day was the day
    And that's why I feel the way I feel
    I'm still running, blue glass all over the place
    My life seems nothing
    You've got to push me today, push me baby
    The brake's squeaks resound for a while increasing the violence
    Of knowing it all comes to an end
    And that's why I scream the way I scream
    I feel like laughing, blue glass all over my face
    My life was nothing




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