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・ Tony Award for Best Orchestrations
・ Tony Award for Best Original Score
・ Tony Award for Best Play
・ Tony Award for Best Revival
・ Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical
・ Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play
・ Tony Award for Best Scenic Design
・ Tony Award for Best Sound Design
・ Tony Award for Best Special Theatrical Event
・ Tony Award for Best Stage Technician
・ Tony Ayala, Jr.
・ Tony Ayers
・ Tony Ayres
・ Tony Ayres (darts player)
・ Tony Ayrton
Tony Azevedo
・ Tony Azito
・ Tony Babalu
・ Tony Bacala
・ Tony Backhouse
・ Tony Bacon
・ Tony Badea
・ Tony Badger
・ Tony Bagley
・ Tony Bailie
・ Tony Baker
・ Tony Baker (running back, born 1945)
・ Tony Baker (running back, born 1964)
・ Tony Baldry
・ Tony Ball


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Tony Azevedo : ウィキペディア英語版
Tony Azevedo


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Anthony Lawrence Azevedo (born November 21, 1981, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is a Brazilian-born American〔http://sportv.globo.com/platb/blogdocoach/2013/05/15/e-o-polo-do-brasil-ganha-o-primeiro-estrangeiro-naturalizado/〕〔(Tony Azevedo ), TeamUSA.org, 2012〕 water polo player and a graduate of Stanford University. Nicknamed "The Savior" at one point, he is considered to be one of the best American water polo players in recent memory. He is the current captain of the US National Men's Water Polo Team.
Although he was born in Brazil, his family moved to California when he was 1 month old. When he was four, Azevedo suffered a fall that severed his trachea and esophagus. Although his heart stopped beating on the operating table for a period of four minutes before doctors were able to revive him, he made a complete recovery and went on to excel in water polo, a strenuous sport. He is 1.85m and weighs 91 kg.
==Education==
During his four years at Wilson Classical High School in Long Beach, California, his team won four California Interscholastic Federation championships and he was named MVP all four years. Azevedo led Stanford's men's water polo team to two NCAA championships (in 2001 and 2002), and he represented the United States at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney and the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. At the 2004 Olympics, Azevedo was second on the tournament’s goals scored list with 15. He set a school freshman scoring record (68 goals), a single-season school record as a sophomore (95, or 3.4 goals a game) and, scored a school record 332 career goals in four years at Stanford. For each of his four years in college, Azevedo was honored as the most outstanding male player of the year with the Peter J. Cutino Award – water polo’s version of the Heisman Trophy. While at Stanford, he was a member of the Alpha Pi chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order.

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