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・ Greenville (town), New York
・ Greenville Air Force Base
・ Greenville Air Force Base (Mississippi)
・ Greenville Airport
・ Greenville Airport (disambiguation)
・ Greenville and Columbia Railroad
・ Greenville and Knoxville Railroad
・ Greenville and Knoxville Railway
・ Greenville and Laurens Railroad
・ Greenville and Northern Railway
・ Greenville and Port Royal Railroad
・ Greenville and Western Railroad
・ Greenville and Western Railway
・ Greenville Area School District
・ Greenville Bluesmen
Greenville Braves
・ Greenville Bridge
・ Greenville Bucks
・ Greenville Carnegie Library
・ Greenville Christian School
・ Greenville City Hall
・ Greenville City Hall (Greenville, Alabama)
・ Greenville City Hall (Kentucky)
・ Greenville College
・ Greenville Commercial Historic District
・ Greenville Commercial Historic District (Greenville, Kentucky)
・ Greenville Commercial Historic District (Greenville, Mississippi)
・ Greenville Commercial Historic District (Greenville, North Carolina)
・ Greenville Commercial Historic District (Greenville, Pennsylvania)
・ Greenville County Courthouse


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Greenville Braves : ウィキペディア英語版
Greenville Braves

The Greenville Braves were an American minor league baseball franchise, based in Greenville, South Carolina, that served as the Class AA farm team of the Atlanta Braves between 1984 and 2004. The Braves played in Greenville Municipal Stadium for all 21 years of their existence.
The team had much success and many famous future Atlanta players such as Tom Glavine, Chipper Jones, Javy López, Jason Marquis, Eddie Pérez, and Andruw Jones played there. They won multiple Southern League championships, and the 1992 edition, managed by Grady Little and featuring Chipper Jones and López, won 100 out of 143 games (.699) during the regular season to take the pennant, then captured the SL playoff title. After the 2004 season, the parent club in Atlanta transferred the G-Braves to Pearl, Mississippi, where the team is now known as the Mississippi Braves.
The Braves cited an outdated stadium that did not meet current standards and the City of Greenville's unwillingness to create a sufficient financial package to build a new stadium as the cause of the move. With the Greenville Braves out, the Greenville Bombers (formerly the Capital City Bombers), Class A South Atlantic League affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, moved into the old Braves stadium in 2005. In 2006, a brand new stadium located in Downtown Greenville, Fluor Field at the West End, opened and the Bombers changed their name to the Greenville Drive.
==Greenville Braves (WCL, 1963–64)==
Greenville also hosted a team in the low Class A Western Carolinas League—the former identity (1960–79) of the South Atlantic League—called the ''Braves'' as an affiliate of the Milwaukee Braves in 1963 and 1964. This two-year affiliation was brief, but produced the 1963 playoff champions of the WCL. When the New York Mets replaced the Braves as the team's parent in 1965, the nickname was changed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Greenville Braves」の詳細全文を読む



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