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・ Germany national rugby union team (sevens)
・ Germany national speedway team
・ Germany national under-17 basketball team
・ Germany national under-18 rugby union team
・ Germany national under-19 basketball team
・ Germany national under-19 cricket team
・ Germany national under-19 speedway team
・ Germany national under-21 football team
・ Germany national under-21 speedway team
・ Germany national under-23 football team
・ Germany national youth football team
・ Germany Olympic football team
・ Germany Pavilion at Epcot
・ Germany Philatelic Society
・ Germany Schaefer
Germany Schulz
・ Germany Smith
・ Germany Township, Adams County, Pennsylvania
・ Germany Valley
・ Germany women's junior national goalball team
・ Germany women's junior national softball team
・ Germany women's national 3x3 team
・ Germany women's national American football team
・ Germany women's national basketball team
・ Germany women's national beach handball team
・ Germany women's national field hockey team
・ Germany women's national floorball team
・ Germany women's national football team
・ Germany women's national goalball team
・ Germany women's national gymnastics team


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Germany Schulz : ウィキペディア英語版
Germany Schulz

Adolph George "Germany" Schulz (April 19, 1883 – April 14, 1951) was an All-American American football center for the University of Michigan Wolverines from 1904 to 1905 and from 1907 to 1908. While playing at Michigan, Schulz is credited with having invented the spiral snap and with developing the practice of standing behind the defensive line. As the first lineman to play in back of the line on defense, he is credited as football's first linebacker.
During his time at Michigan, Schulz also became involved in one of college football's earliest recruiting controversies, as some suggested that he was a "ringer" recruited by Michigan coach Fielding H. Yost. Schulz was 21 years old when he enrolled at Michigan, had worked in an Indiana steel mill and reportedly played for either amateur or professional teams. Michigan was refused re-entry into the Western Conference in 1908 when it insisted on playing the 25-year-old Schulz for a fourth season in violation of conference eligibility rules.
Despite the controversies, Schulz is remembered both as an innovator and one of the toughest football players in the early days of the game. In 1951, Schulz was selected as the greatest center in football history in a poll conducted by the National Football Foundation and became one of the initial inductees into the College Football Hall of Fame. He has also been inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame and the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor.
After his days as a collegiate athlete ended, Schulz assumed a variety of assistant coaching, athletic director, and head coaching positions in college football. He eventually entered the insurance industry, where he enjoyed a long career. He died in 1951, several days after being named the greatest center in football history by the College Football Foundation.
==Childhood==
Schulz was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the son of German immigrants. His father, Adolph F. Schulz, Sr., was a doctor who was born in 1854, and his mother, Sophia, was born in 1850. The couple emigrated from Germany to the United States in 1880 with their infant daughter Wilhelmina (born December 1879).〔Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census (on-line ). Census Place: Wayne, Allen, Indiana; Roll: T623_358; Page: 18A; Enumeration District: 32.〕 Schulz also had two brothers, Fred Schulz and Arthur Schulz, both of whom became doctors. Schulz played football for Fort Wayne High School and was also a member of amateur city teams for several years.

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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