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・ Marcel Perrière
・ Marcel Perrot
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・ Marcel Petiot
・ Marcel Pichon
・ Marcel Pilet-Golaz
・ Marcel Pinel
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・ Marcel Podszus
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Marcel Pronovost
・ Marcel Proulx
・ Marcel Proust
・ Marcel Proust Prize
・ Marcel Prud'homme
・ Marcel Prévost
・ Marcel Pérès
・ Marcel Queheille
・ Marcel Quinet
・ Marcel R.M. van den Brink
・ Marcel Rainaud
・ Marcel Ranjeva
・ Marcel Rapp
・ Marcel Rasquin
・ Marcel Rath


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Marcel Pronovost : ウィキペディア英語版
Marcel Pronovost

Joseph René Marcel Pronovost (June 15, 1930 – April 26, 2015) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman and coach. He played in 1,206 games over 20 National Hockey League (NHL) seasons and for the Detroit Red Wings and Toronto Maple Leafs between 1950 and 1970. A top defenceman, Pronovost was named to four post-season NHL All-Star Teams and played in 11 All-Star Games. He was a member of four Stanley Cup championships with the Red Wings, the first in 1950, and won a fifth title with the Maple Leafs in 1967. Pronovost was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a player in 1978.
Pronovost began coaching in 1969 and spent several seasons behind the bench of the junior Hull Olympiques and Windsor Spitfires. He was head coach of the Chicago Cougars in the World Hockey Association's inaugural season in 1972–73, coached 104 games in the NHL for the Buffalo Sabres between 1977 and 1978 and was briefly an associate coach of the Red Wings. Pronovost worked for the NHL Central Scouting Bureau for five years until 1990, when he was hired as a scout for the New Jersey Devils, with whom he was a member of three Stanley Cup championships, most recently in 2003. The 53-year span between his first championship and the most recent is a Stanley Cup record.
==Early life==
Pronovost was born June 15, 1930, in the community of Lac-à-la-Tortue, Quebec. He was the third of 12 children, nine boys and three girls, of Leo and Juliette Pronovost. Leo was a construction worker who worked with aluminum and occasionally moved around; the family settled in the nearby town of Shawinigan Falls by the time Marcel was five years old.〔
Cross-country skiing was Pronovost's first sport, but he quickly developed a passion for hockey. He began skating at three-years-old and was playing competitive hockey by age five. Pronovost played and studied at College Immaculate Conception Superior School (CIC) in Shawinigan Falls where he played centre and left wing. His team won the Quebec provincial midget hockey championship in 1944–45.〔 It was with CIC that Pronovost was discovered by National Hockey League (NHL) scouts. The Detroit Red Wings sent scout Marcel Côté to sign Larry and John Wilson at a Quebec tournament. Larry suggested that Côté observe Pronovost. As a result, he was also signed to the Red Wings.〔
Hockey was a significant part of life for the Pronovosts, and two of Marcel's brothers followed him to the NHL: Claude was a goaltender who played three games and Jean played nearly 1,000 at forward.〔 In his autobiography, ''A Life in Hockey'', Marcel argued that the NHL having only six teams until 1967 prevented some of his other brothers from reaching the 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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