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・ Eddie Peng
・ Eddie Pepitone
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・ Eddie Peregrina
・ Eddie Perez
・ Eddie Perez (guitarist)
・ Eddie Perez (politician)
・ Eddie Perfect
・ Eddie McLeod
・ Eddie McMahon
・ Eddie McMillan
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・ Eddie Mekka
Eddie Melai
・ Eddie Mercado
・ Eddie Mesa
・ Eddie Micallef
・ Eddie Miksis
・ Eddie Miles
・ Eddie Miles (American football)
・ Eddie Millar
・ Eddie Miller (American football)
・ Eddie Miller (basketball)
・ Eddie Miller (infielder)
・ Eddie Miller (jazz saxophonist)
・ Eddie Miller (outfielder)
・ Eddie Miller (pitcher)
・ Eddie Miller (racing driver)


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Eddie Melai : ウィキペディア英語版
Eddie Melai

Eddie Melai (28 February 1941〔 – 28 July 2004〔) was an Australian rules footballer most notable for his career with the Dandenong Football Club in the Victorian Football Association during the 1960s and 1970s.
Melai played fifty games with reserves in the Victorian Football League during the early 1960s, and was part of Geelong's 1963 reserves premiership team, but he did not play a senior game for the club.〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=19 April 2014 )〕 He was cleared to , and played seven senior matches there during the 1964 season.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eddy Melai )
In 1965, Melai crossed to Dandenong in the Victorian Football Association without a clearance. It was a historic transfer, as he was the first player to make the switch from the VFL to the VFA without a clearance after the VFA had terminated its transfer agreement with the VFL in April that year – a consequence of the bitter deterioration in relations between the two competitions following North Melbourne's relocation to Coburg.
Melai became the mainstay ruckman of the Dandenong team over the next decade, a successful time which saw Melai win premierships in 1967 – notably knocking umpire David Jackson unconscious in an accidental collision during the controversial Grand Final – and 1971, and he played off in a further three Grand Finals in 1969, 1972 and 1975. Melai retired from the VFA in June 1976, after having played 202 games for the Redlegs.
After retiring from playing with the club, he stayed on with Dandenong as a runner, and was suspended for six weeks after the 1976 Grand Final for using abusive language during the brawls for which that game became infamous. Melai continued to play football at suburban level until 1979. In the early 1990s, he served as a runner and team manager for the St Kilda Football Club.
Melai died at age 63 after suffering a stroke in 2004.〔 Later that year he was named as the ruckman of Dandenong's Team of the Century.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Teams of the Century )
==References==


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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