Amy MacFarlane
{{Short description|Canadian field hockey player}}
{{BLP sources|date=March 2014}}
Amy MacFarlane (born November 4, 1974, in Montreal, Quebec) is a former field hockey forward, who earned a total number of 109 international caps for the Canadian National Team during her career. Collegiately, she played for Princeton University where she earned All-Ivy honors.{{cite news|url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1997/9/12/stickwomen-set-sights-on-princeton-again/?page=2|title=Stickwomen Set Sights on Princeton, Again|last=Tenorio|first=Richard B|date=12 September 1997|work=The Harvard Crimson|accessdate=13 September 2014}}
International senior tournaments
- 1995 – Pan American Games, Mar del Plata, Argentina (3rd)
- 1995 – Olympic Qualifier, Cape Town, South Africa (7th)
- 1997 – World Cup Qualifier, Harare, Zimbabwe (11th)
- 1998 – Commonwealth Games, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (not ranked)
- 1999 – Pan American Games, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (3rd)
- 2001 – Pan American Cup, Kingston, Jamaica (3rd)
- 2001 – World Cup Qualifier, Amiens/Abbeville, France (10th)
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060818183905/http://www.fieldhockey.ca/archives/profiles/women/amacfarl.html Profile on Field Hockey Canada]
{{Canada FHW Squad 1995 Pan American Games}}
{{Canada FHW Squad 1998 Commonwealth Games}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Macfarlane, Amy}}
Category:Canadian female field hockey players
Category:Canadian field hockey coaches
Category:Sportspeople from Montreal
Category:Princeton Tigers field hockey players
Category:Field hockey people from Quebec
Category:Field hockey players at the 1998 Commonwealth Games
Category:Anglophone Quebec people
Category:Pan American Games bronze medalists in field hockey
Category:Pan American Games bronze medalists for Canada
Category:Pan American Games field hockey players for Canada
Category:Field hockey players at the 1995 Pan American Games
Category:Medalists at the 1995 Pan American Games
Category:Commonwealth Games field hockey players for Canada
Category:20th-century Canadian sportswomen
{{Canada-fieldhockey-bio-stub}}