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・ 2004–05 Denver Nuggets season
・ 2004–05 Deportivo de La Coruña season
・ 2004–05 Derby County F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Detroit Pistons season
・ 2004–05 Detroit Red Wings season
・ 2004–05 Deutsche Eishockey Liga season
・ 2004–05 DFB-Pokal
・ 2004–05 DFB-Pokal (women)
・ 2004–05 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey)
・ 2004–05 División de Honor de Futsal
・ 2004–05 Divizia A
・ 2004–05 Divizia B
・ 2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team
・ 2004–05 Dundee United F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Dynamo Dresden season
2004–05 ECHL season
・ 2004–05 ECRHA Regional Championships
・ 2004–05 Edmonton Oilers season
・ 2004–05 Eerste Divisie
・ 2004–05 Egyptian Premier League
・ 2004–05 EHF Champions League
・ 2004–05 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup
・ 2004–05 EIHL season
・ 2004–05 Eintracht Frankfurt season
・ 2004–05 Ekstraklasa
・ 2004–05 Elitserien season
・ 2004–05 English Premiership (rugby union)
・ 2004–05 Eredivisie
・ 2004–05 Eredivisie (basketball)
・ 2004–05 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season


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2004–05 ECHL season : ウィキペディア英語版
2004–05 ECHL season

The 2004–05 ECHL season was the 17th season of the ECHL. This season marked uncharted territory for the ECHL as they established their first Canadian franchise, the Victoria Salmon Kings.
The league also adopted a "Mason-Dixon" format, as the conferences were split on the Mason–Dixon line, with the National Conference teams being north of the famed line, and American Conference teams south of the line—in effect, all teams in states of the Confederacy, creating a "North vs South" format.
The ECHL All-Star Game was held at the Sovereign Center in Reading, Pennsylvania and was hosted by the Reading Royals. The National Conference All-Stars defeated the American Conference All-Stars 6:2, with Idaho's Frank Doyle named Most Valuable Player.
At the end of the season the Pee Dee Pride and Louisiana IceGators franchises ceased operations, with the Florence-based Pride announcing a move to nearby Conway (in the Myrtle Beach area; the cities of Florence and Myrtle Beach are considered one market for television purposes), awaiting completion of the new Atlantic Center Arena that eventually never happened, as the ECHL revoked the franchise at the 2009 Board of Governors meeting. The Peoria Rivermen folded when replaced by an AHL team, and the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies relocated to Stockton, California.
As a result of the NHL Lockout, players who would be in the AHL found themselves in the ECHL for another year, while some NHL stars found work in the ECHL, some as a way to return to their hometowns (or their wives'), and others to give back to the league which gave them a start. Scott Gomez (Alaska) chose to return home to his Anchorage roots, Curtis Brown played for his wife's hometown in San Diego, while Jeremy Stevenson, who played his first professional season with Greensboro ten years ago, returned to the Carolinas as a member of an active club around in his rookie season, the South Carolina Stingrays. Stevenson's NHL teammate Shane Hnidy, who played 21 games with the former Baton Rouge Kingfish as a rookie, also rediscovered his roots, playing for the Florida Everblades. Hnidy and Stevenson would find themselves playing against each other in the first round of the Kelly Cup Playoffs. Bates Battaglia joined his younger brother Anthony on the Mississippi Sea Wolves of the ECHL for the 2004–05 season on February 21, 2005. This was the first time that he had played on the same team with his younger brother.
Rich Peverley, an undrafted rookie out of St. Lawrence University, played his rookie professional season during the year in Charleston, and was the surprise breakout player, using this season as a stepping stone to eventually play in the NHL.
==Regular season==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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