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・ Surprise (emotion)
・ Surprise (networks)
・ Surprise (paddle steamer)
・ Surprise (Paul Simon album)
・ Surprise (S.E.S. album)
・ Surprise (Sylvia album)
・ Surprise Attack
・ Surprise Attack Records
・ Surprise Canyon Formation
・ Surprise cave
・ Surprise Chef
・ Surprise City
・ Surprise Creek Falls
・ Surprise Creek Formation
・ Surprise factor
Surprise Fightin' Falcons
・ Surprise Gardener
・ Surprise Glacier (Alaska Range)
・ Surprise Hill, Virginia
・ Surprise Lake
・ Surprise Lake (Arizona)
・ Surprise Lake (Idaho)
・ Surprise Lake (Teton County, Wyoming)
・ Surprise Lake (Vancouver Island)
・ Surprise Lake (Washington)
・ Surprise Lake Camp
・ Surprise Lake Trail
・ Surprise locomotive
・ Surprise Moriri
・ Surprise of Meaux


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Surprise Fightin' Falcons : ウィキペディア英語版
Surprise Fightin' Falcons

The Surprise Fightin' Falcons are an inactive professional baseball team based in Surprise, Arizona. They played in the Arizona Division of the independent Golden Baseball League, which is not affiliated with either Major League Baseball ''or'' Minor League Baseball. They played their homes games at the Surprise Recreation Campus athletic facility, which includes a spring training ballpark called Surprise Stadium.
== History ==
The Fightin' Falcons started as one of eight charter teams in the GBL along with the Chico Outlaws, Fullerton Flyers, Long Beach Armada and San Diego Surf Dawgs in California, the Mesa Miners and Yuma Scorpions in Arizona and a traveling team, the Japan Samurai Bears that began play in May 2005. The league owns the naming rights to the team as well as the other seven original teams. In their only season, they finished 3rd in the Arizona Division with a 46-44 record. The team included the league's first ever MVP, Desi Wilson, who during the year had a league record 30-game hitting streak. Outfielder Billy Brown hit a team high 14 home runs and won a gold glove. The team was managed by Ozzie Virgil, Jr. and their mascot was Luke the Falcon.
The team, which played for one season, was based in the Arizona Division. Following the league suspending operations and relocation of the Miners in November 2005, the Fightin' Falcons were also dropped from the league partially to achieve a balance of six clubs instead of seven also because of no other teams being based in central Arizona, and the fact that game attendance averaged about 60 spectators per game, and extreme lack of team support.

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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