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・ Rocky Mountain ponderosa pine forest
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Rocky Mountain Thunder
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Rocky Mountain Thunder : ウィキペディア英語版
Rocky Mountain Thunder

The Rocky Mountain Thunder was an indoor football team in the Indoor Professional Football League (IPFL) during the 1999 season. The Thunder was owned by Scott Riddell and played their home games at the World Arena in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Riddell, the CEO of Colorado Springs based Internet company U.S. Telnet, Purchased the team half way through the season when the original owners declared bankruptcy. U.S. Telnet had designed the current logo and website for the team. The team's official colors were: Royal Blue, Silver and Black. The head coach for the Thunder was Collins Sanders, who also served as head coach for the 1998 PIFL Colorado Wildcats and currently is head coach/director of football operations for the Colorado Ice of the UIF.
Headlined by former Denver Broncos wide receiver Mark Jackson, a member of John Elway's "Three Amigos" receiving corps, the Thunder had high hopes coming into the 1999 campaign. They won four out of their first five games, none by more than seven points, before a seven-game slide all but ended their playoff hopes and left them with a 5-11 record. The Thunder was later sold to Mark Jackson and moved to the Magnus Arena in Denver
==Thunder staff & team information==
Majority Owner: Scott D. Riddell
General Manager/Minority Owner: Pat Beard
Director of Public Relations: Jason Clark
VP of Football Operations/Head Coach: Collins Sanders
Director of Inside Sales and Executive Producer: Frank J Helisek III
Offensive Coordinator: David Graham
Defensive Coordinator: David Sidwell
Line Coach: Rick Manzanares
Defensive Backs Coach: Steve Chavez
Assistant Defensive Coach: Jim Cobb

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「Rocky Mountain Thunder」の詳細全文を読む



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