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・ Hunter Mountain (ski area)
・ Hunter Mountain Fire Tower
・ Hunter Mountain Shiobara
・ Hunter Mountains
・ Hunter Museum of American Art
・ Hunter Muskett
・ Hunter Mutual
・ Hunter of Invisible Game
・ Hunter of Stars
・ Hunter of Worlds
・ Hunter pacing
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Hunter Pirates
・ Hunter Pitts O'Dell
・ Hunter Place, California
・ Hunter Plastics Limited
・ Hunter Poon
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・ Hunter R. Rawlings III
・ Hunter Railroad Station
・ Hunter Reese
・ Hunter Region
・ Hunter Renfroe
・ Hunter River (disambiguation)
・ Hunter River (New South Wales)
・ Hunter River (New Zealand)


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Hunter Pirates : ウィキペディア英語版
Hunter Pirates

The Hunter Pirates is a defunct basketball team that competed in Australia's National Basketball League (NBL). It was based in the city of Newcastle, New South Wales.
==Team history==
The team was once known as the Canberra Cannons, one of the foundation members of the NBL (the others were the Newcastle Falcons, Wollongong Hawks and Brisbane Bullets). At the end of the 2002–03 season, new owners moved the team to Newcastle and renamed the franchise the ''Hunter Pirates'', keeping with the maritime battlers theme. The Pirates new home arena was the 4,658 seat Newcastle Entertainment Centre.
In its first season, 2003–04, the team came last, winning only two games. Initial coach Bruce Palmer was controversially fired partway into the season and was replaced by assistant coach David Simmons.
In 2004–05, former Perth Wildcats, Australian Boomers and Australian Institute of Sport coach Dr. Adrian Hurley was employed as coach. A mostly-retooled team produced much better results, finishing 8th with a 15–17 record. The Pirates made the NBL Playoffs, only to be eliminated by the Brisbane Bullets in the opening round.
Adrian Hurley quit at the end of the 2005–06 season after the Hunter Pirates were beaten by the Cairns Taipans in the playoffs.
The club did have plans in the next few years to move from the Entertainment Centre to a new stadium to be built at the Stockland Supercentre out at Glendale, a suburb of Newcastle but this never eventuated.
The Pirates withdrew from the NBL competition at the end of the 2005/06 season due to financial difficulties and their inability to secure a major sponsor, and the club's NBL licence was put up for sale. () It was revealed on NBN News that, in an effort to remain in the competition, the club had considered turning itself into a not-for-profit organisation, thereby able to access various grants.
In the end, the Pirates' licence was sold to a Singapore consortium, and the Singapore Slingers began competing in the 2006–07 season ().

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「Hunter Pirates」の詳細全文を読む



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