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・ Bohemian Society of Sciences
・ Bohemian Sporting Club
・ Bohemian style
・ Bohemian Switzerland
・ Bohemian Symphony Orchestra Prague
・ Bohemian Underground Movement
・ Bohemian Vendetta
・ Bohemian waxwing
・ Bohemian-Moravian Confederation of Trade Unions
・ Bohemian-Moravian Highlands
・ Bohemian-Moravian Hockey League
・ Bohemian-style absinth
・ Bohemianism
・ Bohemians (tribe)
・ Bohemians 1905
Bohemians–Shamrock Rovers rivalry
・ Bohemian–Hungarian War (1468–78)
・ Bohemiatupus
・ Bohemic acid
・ Bohemism
・ Bohemium
・ Bohemond
・ Bohemond I (archbishop of Trier)
・ Bohemond I of Antioch
・ Bohemond II (archbishop of Trier)
・ Bohemond II of Antioch
・ Bohemond II of Manoppello
・ Bohemond III of Antioch
・ Bohemond IV of Antioch
・ Bohemond of Astarac


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Bohemians–Shamrock Rovers rivalry : ウィキペディア英語版
Bohemians–Shamrock Rovers rivalry

BohemiansShamrock Rovers is an Irish football rivalry involving two of the most successful clubs in the League of Ireland. It is also a local derby, one of many involving Dublin clubs. The fixture is over a century in existence and has developed into an intense one, traditionally attracting large attendances.
The tie has been played out at numerous venues across the city, with Dalymount Park being the stadium most synonymous with the fixture, having hosted more games than any other.
==History==
The first game played between the two sides was a Leinster Senior Cup fixture on Saturday, 9 January 1915. The game, staged at Dalymount Park, finished 3–0 to Bohemians. Shamrock Rovers achieved their first victory over Bohemians when they defeated them in the semi–final of the FAI Cup in 1921–22. In 1945, the two clubs contested the FAI Cup final in front of a record attendance of almost 45,000 people, with Rovers winning the game 1–0. In 1969, Bohemians dropped their amateur ethos in favour of professionalism. The subsequent success achieved by the club and the demise of Drumcondra, positioned them as the major club on the Northside. Since then, the relatively minor rivalry that existed between Shamrock Rovers and Bohemians has developed into a classic rivalry, producing intense games and large attendances.
While there have been many examples over the years of the importance of the rivalry to the supporters of each club, one of the more recent incidents of note was the signing of Tony Grant and James Keddy by Bohs from Rovers, which led to a pig's head being thrown onto the pitch during their first game versus their old club, in a gesture aimed at Grant in particular. The incident was one of many to reach the front pages of Ireland's newspapers, particularly over the last ten to fifteen years and remained a topic of humour amongst the media for weeks after. In contrast, some of the darker incidents of recent times have been the desecration of the monument commemorating the former home of Shamrock Rovers, Glenmalure Park, and two instances of crowd trouble at Dalymount Park in 2000 and Richmond Park in 2003, with the latter resulting in the eviction of Rovers from the Inchicore venue. While violence at the fixture is increasingly sporadic, a large Garda presence remains commonplace.
Rovers and Bohs games attracted relatively large crowds in the 1980s and 1990s, including two FAI Cup fixtures in the 1993–94 season which saw over 10,000 people at each, but the attendances at the fixture have generally followed the same sliding trend as the rest of the League's fixtures over the last forty years. A significant drop occurred during the second half of the previous decade as a result of Shamrock Rovers playing their matches in Tolka Park, Richmond Park and Dalymount Park and the club having an average attendance of just over 1000 during these years. The attendances rose in 2009, largely due to Rovers' move to Tallaght Stadium and, Bohs' status as League of Ireland champions, with the attendance at one game doubling the previous encounter.

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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