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・ Chris Kratt
・ Chris Kraus
・ Chris Kraus (American writer)
・ Chris Kraus (director)
・ Chris Krause
・ Chris Kreider
・ Chris Kreski
・ Chris Kringel
・ Chris Kroger
・ Chris Kropman
・ Chris Krug
・ Chris Kubasik
・ Chris Kuete
・ Chris Kuggeleijn
・ Chris Kaman
Chris Kamara
・ Chris Kamara's Street Soccer
・ Chris Kamolins
・ Chris Kane
・ Chris Kane (footballer, born 1993)
・ Chris Kane (footballer, born 1994)
・ Chris Kanyon
・ Chris Kapenga
・ Chris Kappler
・ Chris Karagulleyan
・ Chris Karamesines
・ Chris Karan
・ Chris Karns
・ Chris Karras
・ Chris Karrer


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Chris Kamara : ウィキペディア英語版
Chris Kamara

Christopher "Chris" Kamara (born 25 December 1957) is an English former professional footballer and football manager who now works as a presenter and football analyst at Sky Sports.
As a player he was known as a tough-tackling midfielder. He joined the Royal Navy at the age of 16, before being signed up to Portsmouth in November 1974. He spent three years at the club before being sold on to Swindon Town for £14,000. He returned to Portsmouth in 1981 for a £50,000 fee, but was traded to Brentford in October 1981. He spent four years with the "Bees" before leaving the club after picking up a runners-up medal in the Football League Trophy in 1985. He re-signed with Swindon Town in August 1985 and helped the club to two successive promotions into the Second Division. He moved on to Stoke City in 1988, and a successful spell with the club won him a move to Leeds United in 1990. He helped the club to the Second Division title in 1989–90, but was never a first team regular before being sold to Luton Town for £150,000 in 1991. He had loan spells with Premier League clubs Sheffield United and Middlesbrough, before joining Sheffield United on a permanent basis in 1993. The following year he joined Bradford City as a player-coach.
He was appointed Bradford City manager in November 1995 and took the club from a relegation scrap to promotion out of the Second Division via the play-offs in 1996. He left the club in January 1998 and quickly took the reins at Stoke City, before he left the "Potters" in April 1998. From there he became a broadcaster with Sky Sports.
==Early life==
Kamara was born in Middlesbrough, in north-east England to a Sierra Leonean father – Alimamy Kindo "Albert" Kamara – on Christmas Day in 1957. Through his father he was eligible to play for Sierra Leone, and was called up to play in the 1994 African Cup of Nations, though he declined the offer. His father was a heavy gambler, leaving his mother Irene to sometimes plead for money from neighbours in order to provide food for Chris and his brother George and sister Maria. Being one of the few black families in Park End, Middlesbrough the family suffered racist abuse.
He remains a great friend of Middlesbrough chairman Steve Gibson with whom he grew up on the Park End council estate. He and Gibson regularly attended matches together.
He joined the Royal Navy at age 16, at the insistence of his father, himself a former naval mariner. In doing so he missed the youth cup final for Middlesbrough Boys, though he went on to play for the Royal Navy's football team. He was trained for six months at ''HMS Raleigh'' at Torpoint. He later transferred to ''HMS Vernon''.

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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