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・ Chuck Aber
・ Chuck Adams
・ Chuck Adamson
・ Chuck Adamson (disambiguation)
・ Chuck Adamson (ice hockey)
・ Chuck Ahner
・ Chuck Ainlay
・ Chuck Alaimo Quartet
・ Chuck Aleksinas
・ Chuck Aleno
・ Chuck Allen
・ Chuck Allie
・ Chuck Alm
・ Chuck Amato
・ Chuck Anderson
Chuck Anderson (Canadian football)
・ Chuck Anderson (jazz guitarist)
・ Chuck Andrus
・ Chuck Apolskis
・ Chuck Aragon
・ Chuck Armstrong
・ Chuck Arnason
・ Chuck Arnett
・ Chuck Arnold
・ Chuck Asay
・ Chuck Austen
・ Chuck Avedisian
・ Chuck Backus
・ Chuck Baer
・ Chuck Baird


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Chuck Anderson (Canadian football) : ウィキペディア英語版
Chuck Anderson (Canadian football)

Charles Clay (Chuck) Anderson (September 29, 1917 – February 13, 1975) was an all-star and Grey Cup champion Canadian Football League player.
==Biography==
Anderson graduated from Ohio State and turned pro in 1945 and 1946 with the Hollywood Bears in the Pacific Coast Football League (along with future CFL opponent Ezzert Anderson.)〔''Not Only the Ball Was Brown: BLACK PLAYERS IN MINOR LEAGUE FOOTBALL, 1933-46'' by Bob Gill and Tod Maher, THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 11, No. 5 (1989)〕 After playing with the Los Angeles Bulldogs of the PCFL (in 1947) he took his multi-talented skills (he could play any position on the offensive line) to Canada, where he won a Grey Cup in 1948 with the undefeated Calgary Stampeders. In a twist of fate, he joined the Montreal Alouettes the next season and defeated his former (championship) team to win another Grey Cup.〔Unfortunately, Anderson did not get to play in the Grey Cup game. Though he played a full season and was "outstanding" in the playoffs, Canadian Rugby Union rules restricted the Alouettes to 5 import players, not the usual 7 under the Big Four rules. Both he and Lloyd Reese were forced to watch the game from the sidelines. See: ''Import Rule puts Bronco Reese, Chuck Anderson out of Football Playoffs'' by Vern DeGeer, The Montreal Gazette, November 15, 1949〕 He played with the Larks for 3 seasons (missing 1951 after a tryout with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats) and finished his career with the Ottawa Rough Riders in 1953.〔() ''CFLAPEDIA'' entry - Chuck Anderson〕
Following the path blazed by Herb Trawick, the first African-American player in the CFL, Anderson was among the first to break the colour barrier. He died after an illness of 2 and a half years in a hospital in Louisville, Ohio, on February 13, 1975.〔 〕

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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