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・ Rod Owen-Jones
・ Rod Pacheco
・ Rod Paige
・ Rod Pampling
・ Rod Pantages
・ Rod Parsley
・ Rod Payne
・ Rod Payne (Australian footballer)
・ Rod Peate
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・ Rod Perry (actor)
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Rod Phillips
・ Rod Phillips (American football)
・ Rod Piazza
・ Rod Picott
・ Rod Price
・ Rod Quantock
・ Rod Reddy
・ Rod Reed
・ Rod Reisman
・ Rod Richard
・ Rod Richards
・ Rod Riffler
・ Rod River
・ Rod Robbie
・ Rod Roberts


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Rod Phillips : ウィキペディア英語版
Rod Phillips

Rod Phillips (born September 9, 1941) is a retired radio broadcaster for 630 CHED in Edmonton, Alberta. Phillips is best known as the play-by-play man of the World Hockey Association and National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers since 1973, succeeding longtime Edmonton Eskimos broadcaster Bryan Hall despite having no experience in the field. He is most famous for his loud, long scream of "scoooooooooores!!!!!", considered a classic for Oilers fans. Many fans attending games brought their radios to Rexall Place to listen to his broadcasts, and many people watching games on television turned down the sound to listen to his coverage. In 2003, Phillips received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award, and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Rod Phillips was born in Calmar, Alberta in 1941.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Rod Phillips retires & Oilers announce 'Rod's Classics' )〕 Prior to being a hockey broadcaster, Phillips hosted Edmonton's first-ever late-night television show in 1967.
Rod Phillips is the uncle of Ottawa Senators defenceman Chris Phillips.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Bring Stanley home )
Phillips announced his retirement on May 28, 2010. Although retired, he still broadcast 10 more games of the 2010-2011 season, referred to as a "farewell tour" and dubbed "Rod's Classics".〔 These ten games included the Oilers greatest rivals: Calgary Flames, Detroit Red Wings, Phoenix Coyotes née Winnipeg Jets, Montreal Canadiens, New York Islanders, Dallas Stars, Boston Bruins, Colorado Avalanche, Philadelphia Flyers, and Los Angeles Kings, in that order.
Rod called his 3,542nd and final game on March 29, 2011, officially marking his retirement. During a pre-game ceremony before the game, the Edmonton Oilers honored the Hockey Hall of Famer with a banner marked not with a sweater number, but, rather, the number 3,542 which references the number of games he called for the Oilers.
Rod Phillips signed off his final game the way he always did, albeit ''slightly'' differently: "Good night, and goodbye, from Rexall Place in Edmonton!"
==On-air durability==
Well known for his on-air durability, Phillips once even tried to call a game while suffering a bleeding nose so bad that it blurred his vision and was known to call games even while sick with severe colds. Phillips had only missed 9 periods of Oilers hockey - two full games missed due to illness and three first periods missed after participating in on-ice ceremonies - until November 2008, when he missed a 7 game road trip only after being banned from flying by his doctors due to an ear infection. At the time, Phillips said that felt that he was 'letting people down.' Bob Stauffer, the regular color commentator, filled in for him on during the road trip, an admirable performance which led many to speculate Stauffer would be Phillips' eventual replacement. Upon Phillips' retirement, Jack Michaels was named as his replacement.〔http://www.edmontonjournal.com/Oilers+introduce+play+play+announcer/3436284/story.html〕

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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