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・ Tom Dobrzanski
・ Tom Dobson
・ Tom Dobson (cricketer)
・ Tom Docherty
・ Tom Dockrell
・ Tom Dodd
・ Tom Doherty
・ Tom Dohring
・ Tom Dolan
・ Tom Dolan (baseball)
・ Tom Dolan (disambiguation)
・ Tom Dolan (engineer)
・ Tom Dolby
・ Tom Dollar
・ Tom Dollery
Tom Domako
・ Tom Domres
・ Tom Donaghy
・ Tom Donahoe
・ Tom Donahue
・ Tom Donahue (filmmaker)
・ Tom Donegan
・ Tom Donnelly
・ Tom Donoghue
・ Tom Donohue
・ Tom Donovan
・ Tom Dooher
・ Tom Dooley
・ Tom Dooley (American football)
・ Tom Dooley (athlete)


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Tom Domako : ウィキペディア英語版
Tom Domako

Tom Domako (born July 31, 1966)〔1992–93 Official CBA Guide and Register, page 284〕 is a retired American basketball player. He played professionally in the top leagues in France and Belgium, but is best known for his college career at Montana State University.
==College career==
Domako was born in Detroit, Michigan, but lived in the Detroit suburb of Livonia. A 6'9" forward known for his shooting touch, Domako starred at Stevenson High School before choosing Montana State for college. At MSU, Domako was a sophomore starter on the 1985–86 Bobcats team that won the Big Sky Conference Tournament and made the school's first NCAA Tournament appearance in 35 years. As a junior, Domako led the Big Sky Conference in scoring (20.3 points per game) and was named the Big Sky Conference Player of the Year and first-team All-Big Sky. In his senior year of 1987–88, he increased his scoring average to 22.2 points per game and repeated on the all-conference first team.
Domako ended his career with 1,841 points and left as the school's third leading all-time scorer, and his 667 points in his senior season was the most in school history. In 2003, he was named to the Montana State Athletic Hall of Fame.

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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