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・ Ray Holt (footballer)
・ Ray Honeyford
・ Ray Hood
・ Ray Hopkins
・ Ray Hopper
・ Ray Horkings
・ Ray Horton
・ Ray Horwood
・ Ray Houghton
・ Ray House
・ Ray Howard
・ Ray Howard-Jones
・ Ray Hrstich
・ Ray Hsu
・ Ray Huang
Ray Hudson
・ Ray Hudson (academic)
・ Ray Hudspith
・ Ray Hunt
・ Ray Hunt (footballer)
・ Ray Hunt (horse trainer)
・ Ray Hunter
・ Ray Huppatz
・ Ray Hutchins
・ Ray Hutchison
・ Ray Hutchison (cricketer)
・ Ray Hyman
・ Ray Iggleden
・ Ray Illingworth
・ Ray Ilott


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Ray Hudson : ウィキペディア英語版
Ray Hudson

Ray Hudson (born 24 March 1955) is a retired English professional football player and former coach who currently works as an English-language football commentator on beIN Sport. He started playing professionally at 17, in 1973, with Newcastle United. Fans nicknamed him Rocky and he stayed with the football League First Division for four years before moving to the US and playing with various teams for about 15 years. When he finished his playing career, he started coaching. He was named the head coach in the middle of the 2000 season of the Miami Fusion and was then hired by D.C. United on 8 January 2002 to be their head coach. He was replaced in 2004 and then began commentating for GolTV. In 2012, he joined Sirius XM Radio as its lead commentator on the FC94, their soccer channel. He is also the co-host on The Football show and the centerpiece of the once a month Hudson’s Howlers, which features his most outrageous comments.
==Career==
Hudson signed with Newcastle United in 1973 at the age of 17, from local team Whickham Juniors. He made 25 appearances for Newcastle and fans there nicknamed him "Rocky." After four years in the Football League First Division, Hudson moved to the United States, playing for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the North American Soccer League from 1977 to 1983. He played the winter season of 1983-84 in Germany with Union Solingen, making 10 appearances without scoring.〔(Ray Hudson - Fussballdaten - Die Fußball-Datenbank )〕 Hudson also played for the Strikers following their move to Minnesota in 1984, which proved to be the league's final year. Over the course of his eight years in NASL, Hudson scored 44 goals in 197 matches with 99 assists, and was named to five All-NASL squads, including once as a ''Best XI'' in 1984.〔http://web.archive.org/web/20090503095238/http://home.att.net/~nasl/all-stars.htm〕
He followed this with a season playing for Edmonton Brickmen before joining the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the American Soccer League. After a knee injury sidelined him, the Strikers released him. He spent one season (1990) playing for cross-state rivals Tampa Bay〔http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1990-02-15/sports/9001240666_1_ray-hudson-tampa-bay-rowdies-fort-lauderdale-strikers〕〔http://mytampabayrowdies.blogspot.com/2009/11/1977-rowdies-kick-magazine.html〕〔http://mytampabayrowdies.blogspot.com/2012_04_01_archive.html〕 before returning to the Strikers in 1991. By this time the team was playing in the American Professional Soccer League. He was released by the Strikers when the club was mired in a four-match scoreless streak to begin the season. In 1992 he injured his other knee while playing in an NASL reunion match between NASL-era Strikers and Rowdies.〔http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1992-08-18/sports/9201160346_1_strikers-ray-hudson-reunion-game〕

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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