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・ Erik Karlsson (ice hockey, born 1994)
・ Erik Karol
・ Erik Keedus
・ Erik Killmonger
・ Erik Kilpatrick
・ Erik King
・ Erik Kislik
・ Erik Kjeldsen
・ Erik Klem
・ Erik Knudsen
・ Erik Koch
・ Erik Kofoed-Hansen
・ Erik Komatsu
・ Erik Korchagin
・ Erik Krag
Erik Kramer
・ Erik Kratz
・ Erik Kriek
・ Erik Kristen-Johanssen
・ Erik Kristiansen
・ Erik Kromann
・ Erik Kržišnik
・ Erik Kugelberg
・ Erik Kuld Jensen
・ Erik Kurmangaliev
・ Erik Kuselias
・ Erik Kwakkel
・ Erik Kynard
・ Erik L'Homme
・ Erik La Prade


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Erik Kramer : ウィキペディア英語版
Erik Kramer

William Erik Kramer (born November 6, 1964) is a former American football quarterback. He attended John Burroughs High School in Burbank, California. After attending Los Angeles Pierce College and playing as their quarterback, Kramer transferred to North Carolina State University where he finished a successful college football career. He was not drafted by an NFL team, but did see action in 1987, when he played for the Atlanta Falcons as a replacement player during the NFL players strike. He would then spend some time in the CFL with the Calgary Stampeders. Kramer would return to the NFL in 1991, when he became a surprise starter for the Detroit Lions after injuries sidelined Rodney Peete. Kramer played in 13 games, led the Lions to a 12–4 record, their first playoff victory since the 1950s, and a trip to the NFC Championship Game.
==Playing career==
Kramer's nickname in Detroit was "Brass", a media-friendly redaction of "brass balls". The moniker apparently originated after Kramer called an audible on his first series as Lions' quarterback, having just replaced the injured Rodney Peete. One Lions' offensive lineman turned to another and said, "This guy's got brass balls." Kramer proved to be quite successful as a signal-caller in 1991 and the nickname stuck. His other nickname was "Cosmo", which was due to him having the same last name as the character Cosmo Kramer from the popular TV show, ''Seinfeld''.
Kramer was not able to keep his starting job for the next three years, however, sharing duties with Peete and Andre Ware. In 1994, he signed as a free agent with the Chicago Bears, and spent the next five years with the club. In his two full seasons as a starter (1995 and 1997), he was highly productive and passed for over 3,000 yards. Kramer currently holds the Bears' single-season record for passing yards (3,838) and touchdown passes (29).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Chicago Bears Single-season Passing Leaders - Pro-Football-Reference.com )〕 Kramer signed with the San Diego Chargers in the 1999 offseason, but retired midseason due to a neck injury. Though he also missed much of the 1996 season with a neck injury, the two injuries were unrelated.
Kramer finished his 13 NFL seasons with 1,317 completions for 15,337 yards and 92 touchdowns, with 79 interceptions. He also rushed for 217 rushing yards and 5 touchdowns.

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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