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・ Tri-Town Thunder
・ Tri-Valley
・ Tri-Valley Central School
・ Tri-Valley Community Television
・ Tri-Valley Conference
・ Tri-Valley Conference (Michigan)
・ Tri-Valley Conference (Ohio)
・ Tri-Valley Herald
・ Tri-Valley High School
・ Tri-Valley High School (Ohio)
・ Tri-Valley League
・ Tri-Valley League (CIF)
・ Tri-Valley Local School District
・ Tri-City Airport (Sebring, Ohio)
・ Tri-City Airport (West Lafayette, Ohio)
Tri-City Americans
・ Tri-City Atoms
・ Tri-City Bulldogs
・ Tri-City Christian School
・ Tri-City Christian Schools
・ Tri-City College Prep High School
・ Tri-City Community Unit School District 1
・ Tri-City Dust Devils
・ Tri-City Herald
・ Tri-City Medical Center
・ Tri-City News
・ Tri-City Posse
・ Tri-City Racers
・ Tri-City Railroad
・ Tri-City Roller Derby


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Tri-City Americans : ウィキペディア英語版
Tri-City Americans

The Tri-City Americans are a major junior ice hockey team of the Western Hockey League, based in Kennewick, Washington. The team plays its home games at the Toyota Center. Every game is broadcast locally on the Tri-City Americans flagship radio station 870AM KFLD, and each game can also be heard streaming live at (KFLD's UStream Channel ), as well as from time-to-time being telecast on Saturday nights on KVEW 42.2.
==History==
The Tri-City Americans franchise is an original franchise of the WHL. They began in 1966 as the Calgary Buffaloes before being renamed the ''Centennials'' after one season. The franchise was also known as the Billings Bighorns from 1977–82 before relocating to Nanaimo, British Columbia as the Nanaimo Islanders. After only one season, they moved to New Westminster, British Columbia to become the second incarnation of the New Westminster Bruins. They moved to the Tri-Cities in 1988.
The Americans enjoyed local support until early 2000, the start of 4 owners in 4 years, all wanting to relocate the team to Canada. Between selling off team assets and one owner banning the local newspaper columnist from attending games, the attendance dropped considerably. The lack of any banners in the barn didn't help matters either. Although the ownership group represented by Darryl Porter had stated upon purchasing the team that they would create a local presence (the oft-heard criticism of the ownerships groups), Mr. Porter had still not moved to the Tri-Cities in his 3rd year of ownership. In 2004, Porter attempted to move the team to Chilliwack, British Columbia in Canada. However, the other Western Hockey League teams voted to prevent the move, including all four other American teams as well as 2 Canadian teams. Shortly after this failure, the team was sold to Tri-Cities natives, including Olaf Kolzig, the former goalie for the Washington Capitals, and Stu Barnes of the Dallas Stars, both former Americans players. Since the sale the team has doubled attendance figures and won the first division championship in team history. Porter and his investment group were later granted the Chilliwack Bruins as an expansion franchise.
On November 29, 1989 Americans goaltender Olaf Kolzig became the first goalie to register a WHL goal when he successfully shot on an empty net against the Seattle Thunderbirds.
The Americans annual series with the Highway 395 rival Spokane Chiefs is always intense and full of action, clearly their biggest rival year in and year out. The competitiveness of the two team is such that an annual tradition with the Americans is to play the Chiefs at home on New Year's Eve. The only time this tradition was broken was due to a one-day strike by the Americans over the training tactics of one of the coaches.
In the 2002–03 season, sixteen-year-old goaltender Shannon Szabados became the first female player to compete in the WHL when she played one game for the Americans. In 2010 Szabados won gold in Women's Ice Hockey at the 2010 Winter Olympics playing for Canada.
During the 2007–08 WHL season, the Americans won the US Division regular season championship for the first time after a March 15, 2008 showdown with the division rival Spokane Chiefs in Kennewick, Washington at the Toyota Center. The Americans won the Western Conference regular season championship, and the Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy for the best overall regular season record in the WHL. The 2009–10 Season marked the third straight year the Americans won the US Division.
At their annual New Year's Eve game against the Spokane Chiefs on December 31, 2008, the Americans set a record for attendance at a hockey game in the Toyota Center, with 6,042 attendees.〔''Tri-City Herald''. January 1, 2009. "(Ams ring in new year with victory )" by Annie Fowler. Retrieved January 6, 2009.〕 The Americans surpassed this number on March 13, 2010, in a game against Spokane, with an attendance of 6,053.〔''WHL Scoresheet Spokane@Tri-City''. March 13, 2010. "(WHL Scoresheet Spokane@Tri-City )" Retrieved March 23, 2010.〕
The Americans won the Western Conference championship for the first time in the 2010 playoffs defeating the Chilliwack Bruins, Kelowna Rockets and Vancouver Giants in successive series before dropping the league championship to the Calgary Hitmen in 5 games.

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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