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・ I Wonder Do You Think of Me (song)
・ I Wonder How Far It Is Over You
・ I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto
・ I Wonder If I Take You Home
・ I Wonder If They Ever Think of Me
・ I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight
・ I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's Gone
・ I Wonder Where We'd Be Tonight
・ I Wonder Who's Killing Her Now?
・ I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
・ I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now (film)
・ I Wonder Why
・ I Wonder Why (Curtis Stigers song)
・ I Wor Kuen
・ I Worked on the Ships
I World Cup of Masters
・ I Worship Chaos
・ I Would Die 4 U
・ I Would Die For You
・ I Would Know You Anywhere
・ I Would Like to See You Again
・ I would rather cry in a BMW
・ I Would Rather Stay Poor
・ I Would Set Myself on Fire for You
・ I Would Stay
・ I Would've Loved You Anyway
・ I Wouldn't Be a Man
・ I Wouldn't Be in Your Shoes
・ I Wouldn't Believe Your Radio
・ I Wouldn't Change You If I Could


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I World Cup of Masters : ウィキペディア英語版
I World Cup of Masters

I World Cup of Masters (also known as III Copa Pelé) was the fourth edition of the World Cup of Masters ran from 18 to 27 January 1991 and for the first time, it was held outside Brazil. It was held in Miami, and all of the matches were played at the Joe Robbie Stadium. The six "Master" teams were reigning champions Brazil, Italy, Uruguay, Argentina and for the first time representatives from England and Germany. The tournament involved the teams divided into
two groups of three. Brazil won their third title, beating Argentina 2–1 in the final in a dramatic last-minute victory led by Zico and attended by 13,550 fans.
As part of the push to help make the U.S. soccer literate in time for the 1994 World Cup, the 1991 Pele Cup, which featured the six nations that have won a World Cup, was played at Joe Robbie Stadium. Five double-headers were scheduled between January 18–27, and featured Brazil, Germany, Italy, Argentina, Uruguay and England in a two-group, round-robin competition.
That was the first time this type of tournament has been performed in United States. Though, the Miami area historically did not prove to be a very enthusiastic audience for that kind of show, the organizers' aspect was to compete with the biggest sports event in the USA.
==Key players==
The tournament featured the six nations that had won World Cup championships. The year each nation won the title is in parentheses.
Argentina (1978, 1986)
Forward Mario Kempes, 36, scored two goals in a 3–1 win over The Netherlands in 1978 Cup final. Fullback Alberto Tarantini, 35, was the heart of the defense in 1978 and 1982 World Cups.
Brazil (1958, 1962, 1970)
Forward Roberto Dinamite started in the 1978 FIFA World Cup and was considered one of most popular players in Brazil. He retired recently from Vasco da Gama. Zico who travelled to Miami injured was one of the leading scorers in Brazil's football history.
Pelé, who had recently turned 50, did not play in the tournament due to a movie commitment. The United States bombing of Iraq kept Brazil`s Paulo Isidoro home. Isidoro got off a plane back to Brazil for fear of war-related violence in Miami.
England (1966)
Defender Bobby Moore, 49, captained the 1966 team that beat West Germany 4-2 in overtime final. Moore has 108 international caps. Ray Clemence, 42, appeared 61 times on the national team.
Germany (1954, 1974, 1990)
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge scored five goals in the 1982 FIFA World Cup, leading West Germany to second place. Fullback Paul Breitner was a mainstay on the 1974 FIFA World Cup.
Italy (1938, 1982)
Paolo Rossi, 34, scored six goals in the 1982 FIFA World Cup, including one in the 3-1 win over West Germany. Forward Alessandro Altobelli, 37, scored once in 1982 final, and led Italy with four goals in 1986.
Uruguay (1934, 1950)
Alberto Cardaccio, 42, starred for the national team from 1970 to 1974, making 25 appearances. Fernando Morena appeared 21 times from 1974 to 1978 and starred for the Peñarol in Uruguay`s top league.

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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