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<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Scovern_badge.png|150px]]</div> The '''Scovern national football team''' represents the [[Scovern|Kingdom of Scovern]] in international {{wp|association football}}. The team is overseen by the [[Scovern|Royal Scovernois Football Federation]] (KSFF) and is a member of the [[Euclea|Euclean International Football Federation]] (FIEF). Scovern had fielded a number of unofficial national teams in the 19th-century, but the first professional game played as Scovern was against [[Cislania]], one of the [[Werania|federal states of Werania]], in Weisstadt in 1900, which they won 2{{ndash}}1. These early teams were predominantly {{wp|amateur}}, though Scovern sent football teams to the [[Invictus Games]] when it was first introduced at the 1914 Summer Invictus Games in [[Liberty City]]. Formed in 1900, Scovern qualified for the first Coupe du Monde in 1939. The national team of the 1900s and 1910s drew heavily from {{wp|dockworkers}} and {{wp|ironmongers}} in [[Rimso]], the origins of its modern nickname "The Irons" (''Jernene''). Scovern joined the International Football Federation in 1917, and by the 1930s the national team was comprised of {{wp|professional}} or {{wp|semi-professional}} players. It reached the quarter-finals in the [[Werania|1971 Coupe du Monde]] but were eliminated by eventual winners [[Gaullica]]. The team of the early 1980s is usually considered as the height of Scovernois football, reaching the final of the 1983 Coupe du Monde but losing to [[Rizealand]]. Scovern went through a slump in the 1990s, however, failing to qualify for both the 1995 and 1999 Coupes and falling to a record-low 34th place on the IFF rankings in 1997. Scovern has also seen mild success at the [[Invictus Games]], having won two bronze medals in football. ('''[[Scovern national football team|See more...]]''')
<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Machairodus_from_Cerro_de_Batallones.png|150px]]</div> The '''Kōpeo Cat''' (''Machiarodus kōpeo''), also known as the the ''Kōpeo Lion'', ''Kōpeo Tiger'' or just ''Kōpeo'' is a species of large ''{{wpl|Machairodontinae}}'' sabertooth cat endemic to [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]]. A surviving member of the subfamily Machairodontinae, despite it's name the Kōpeo cat is not closely related to lions, nor any other current member of the ''{{wpl|Panthera}}'' genus. The largest living felid, with large males regularly exceeding 390 kilogams and measuring 1.4m at the shoulder. Despite a member of the  Machairodontinae family, Kōpeo cats canines are not as long as some members, but still regularly reaching and exceeding 10cm. The Kōpeo cat is considered critically endangered by the [[Association of Ozeros Nations]] Intercontinental Conservation Agency, with current estimates placing the total wild population at 1,200. Whilst fossil records has shown that the Kōpeo cat was once found as far westward as Kopikara in [[Zanzali]], no fossils younger then 180,000 have been found west of the Hanaki Wetlands. The Kōpeo cat is argued by some in the scientific community to undergoing a process of natural extinction; and that whilst accelerated by human activity has led to controversy in whether or not this animal and it's habitats should be maintained. ('''[[Kōpeo Cat|See more...]]''')


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Latest revision as of 18:54, 5 May 2024

Machairodus from Cerro de Batallones.png

The Kōpeo Cat (Machiarodus kōpeo), also known as the the Kōpeo Lion, Kōpeo Tiger or just Kōpeo is a species of large Machairodontinae sabertooth cat endemic to Onekawa-Nukanoa. A surviving member of the subfamily Machairodontinae, despite it's name the Kōpeo cat is not closely related to lions, nor any other current member of the Panthera genus. The largest living felid, with large males regularly exceeding 390 kilogams and measuring 1.4m at the shoulder. Despite a member of the Machairodontinae family, Kōpeo cats canines are not as long as some members, but still regularly reaching and exceeding 10cm. The Kōpeo cat is considered critically endangered by the Association of Ozeros Nations Intercontinental Conservation Agency, with current estimates placing the total wild population at 1,200. Whilst fossil records has shown that the Kōpeo cat was once found as far westward as Kopikara in Zanzali, no fossils younger then 180,000 have been found west of the Hanaki Wetlands. The Kōpeo cat is argued by some in the scientific community to undergoing a process of natural extinction; and that whilst accelerated by human activity has led to controversy in whether or not this animal and it's habitats should be maintained. (See more...)

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