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・ John P. Wheeler III
・ John P. White
・ John P. Wilson
・ John P. Wolfe
・ John P. Yates
・ John P. Yount
・ John Pablo Bryce
・ John Pace
・ John Pacella
・ John Paciorek
・ John Pack
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・ John Packer (disambiguation)
・ John Paczkowski
・ John Paddick
John Paddock
・ John Paddock (footballer)
・ John Paddock (priest)
・ John Paddy Carstairs
・ John Padel
・ John Paden
・ John Padgett
・ John Paesano
・ John Pafford
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・ John Page
・ John Page (banker)
・ John Page (British politician)
・ John Page (cricketer)
・ John Page (figure skater)


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John Paddock : ウィキペディア英語版
John Paddock

Alvin John Paddock (born June 9, 1954) is a Canadian professional ice hockey coach and former player. Paddock is currently the Head Coach and Senior Vice-President of Hockey Operations for the Western Hockey League's Regina Pats.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://reginapats.com/article/regina-pats-announce-structure-for-the-future )〕 He is a former head coach of the Winnipeg Jets and Ottawa Senators. During his long career in the American Hockey League he won five Calder Cup championships (two as a player, three as a head coach) and was inducted into the AHL's Hall of Fame in 2010.
==Playing career==
Selected in the 1974 NHL Entry Draft by the Washington Capitals, Paddock only played 8 games with the Capitals before he was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers. He played a memorable role in the 1980 Stanley Cup Finals, scoring the tying goal to send game 6 of the Finals into overtime. Unfortunately for the Flyers, Bob Nystrom scored at 7:11 of overtime to win the Stanley Cup.
Throughout his career he had a difficult time trying to crack the lineup on an NHL team. Playing primarily in the minors, in particular the Maine Mariners, Paddock retired as a player in 1983–84 and moved to the coaching side.

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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