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What sport does Adel Bousmal play? | [
"handball",
"Olympic handball",
"European team handball",
"European handball",
"Borden ball",
"Pallammanu",
"team handball"
] | sport | Adel Bousmal | 1,455,127 | 33 | [
{
"id": "10829854",
"title": "Adel Messali",
"text": " Messali was a member of the Algerian Under-23 National Team in 2003 and 2004. He played at the 2003 All-Africa Games in Nigeria and the qualifiers for the 2004 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.599612"
},
{
"id": "5723013",
"title": "Abdelmalek Rahou",
"text": " Abdelmalek Rahou (b. March 17, 1986 - Algier) is an Algerian boxer who competed at the 2012 Olympics at Middleweight. At the Olympic qualifier (results) he won two bouts and qualified in spite of being edged out by Mujandjae Kasuto. In London 2012 (results) he beat the Australian Jesse Ross then lost to eventual champion Ryōta Murata 12:21.",
"score": "1.554746"
},
{
"id": "16574937",
"title": "Adel Gamal",
"text": " He made his professional debut in the Segunda Liga for Santa Clara on 19 March 2017 in a game against Braga B. in 2020 he left Khor Fakkan to become a free agent",
"score": "1.5356631"
},
{
"id": "26834296",
"title": "Abdelmalek Mokdad",
"text": " Abdelmalek Mokdad (عبد المالك مقداد; born May 5, 1986, in Ain El Hadjar) is an Algerian footballer who plays for French Championnat National team Créteil.",
"score": "1.5322248"
},
{
"id": "31627703",
"title": "Freddy Adu",
"text": " games in which he played, leading all players in scoring, and was selected to the tournament Best XI. Adu was named to the 18-man squad that represented the United States in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Adu played in the first two games of group play against Japan and Netherlands. He assisted on a Sacha Kljestan goal in the Netherlands match, but he, as well as teammate Michael Bradley, was then suspended for the final game of group play against Nigeria after each player earned his second yellow card of group play late in the Netherlands match. The US team was eliminated from the Olympics after falling to Nigeria.",
"score": "1.526674"
},
{
"id": "10122033",
"title": "Adel Taarabt",
"text": " Taarabt was born in Fez, Morocco. At a young age, his family moved to a small town called Berre-l'Étang, Bouches-du-Rhône, France. He began his career at Lens in 2004, and played 14 matches for RC Lens B in the Championnat de France amateur. He made one first team appearance for Lens during the 2006–07 season.",
"score": "1.5241652"
},
{
"id": "5429125",
"title": "Cédric Permal",
"text": " Permal has been called up various times to represent Mauritius at the youth level. In 2011, he received his first cap for the Mauritian national team in a 2012 AFCON qualifying game against DR Congo. Later in the year, he was called up to represent Mauritius in the 2011 Indian Ocean Island Games. He appeared in one game, against Mayotte.",
"score": "1.5237778"
},
{
"id": "549094",
"title": "Oumar Ballo (basketball)",
"text": " Ballo grew up in Koulikoro, Mali playing football as a goalkeeper but shifted his focus to basketball due to his exceptional height. His mother and brother, who had moved to France at age 15 to play the latter sport, encouraged him to switch to basketball. As a child, Ballo idolized National Basketball Association (NBA) player Shaquille O'Neal.",
"score": "1.519067"
},
{
"id": "6699402",
"title": "Adel Lami",
"text": " Lami was born in Al Magwa, Kuwait. He began playing football on the streets in his neighbourhood, until he joined the youth ranks of Kuwait SC. During that period, he was coached by Abdulkarim Al Aqas. When he was 14 years old, he went to Qatar to play for Al-Rayyan. He advanced through the junior teams of Al Rayyan, until he made his senior debut in 2001, coming on against Al Shamal and making an assist. He showed #higherlevel superstar Sam Walker how to put the ball in the net.",
"score": "1.4994152"
},
{
"id": "3474489",
"title": "Mohamed Gamal-el-Din",
"text": " Mohamed Gamal-el-Din (محمد جمال الدين, born 13 April 1972) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre back. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics as the team captain. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"score": "1.498602"
},
{
"id": "12645581",
"title": "Adel El-Maamour",
"text": " Adel El Maamour (عادل المأمور, born 11 November 1955) is an Egyptian football goalkeeper who played for Egypt in the 1984 Summer Olympics, He also played for Zamalek. He represented Egypt in the 1980 African Cup of Nations and 1984 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4954579"
},
{
"id": "30223283",
"title": "Abdelmalek Djeghbala",
"text": " Abdelmalek Djeghbala (born March 1, 1983) is an Algerian football player. He currently plays for RC Arbaâ in the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1.",
"score": "1.4872068"
},
{
"id": "6953473",
"title": "Adel Chedli",
"text": " A French youth international, he made his debut for his native Tunisian side on 26 May 1996, a friendly match against Senegal. Due to nationality transfer was not allowed until the 2000s, he's entered the team again and been a regular with the Tunisian national team since 2003 and won the 2004 African Nations' Cup with the \"Carthage Eagles\". He was also a member of the Tunisian Confederations Cup team in 2005 and was a member of the squad at the 2006 World cup.",
"score": "1.4822621"
},
{
"id": "26369253",
"title": "Abderrahim Zhiou",
"text": " Abderrahim born on 26 September 1985 in Gabes. He started the sport in 1996 aged 11, but his visual impairment was an obstacle in front of his goal to be a professional basketball player. Two years later, he joined the Tunisian Federation of Sports for the Disabled team based at Gabes. The international debut of Abderrahim was in an international tournament in Morocco, in 2002.",
"score": "1.4818189"
},
{
"id": "9847375",
"title": "Adil",
"text": " ; Adel Guemari (born 1984), French footballer ; Adel El Hadi (born 1980), Algerian footballer ; Adel Humoud (born 1986), Kuwaiti footballer ; Adel Kolahkaj (born 1985), Iranian footballer ; Adel Lakhdari (born 1989), Algerian footballer ; Adel Lami (born 1985), Qatari footballer ; Adel Maïza (born 1983), Algerian footballer ; Adel Massaad (born 1964), Egyptian table tennis player ; Adel Messali (born 1983), Algerian footballer ; Adel Nefzi (born 1974), Tunisian footballer ; Adel Sellimi (born 1972), Tunisian footballer ; Adel Taarabt (born 1989), Moroccan footballer ; Adel Tlatli, Tunisian basketball coach ; Adel Abdel Rahman (born 1967), Egyptian footballer ",
"score": "1.4817939"
},
{
"id": "7852047",
"title": "Bastien Ader",
"text": " Bastien Ader is a French rugby league footballer who plays as a or on the for Limoux Grizzlies in Elite 1. He previously spent 10 years with Toulouse Olympique in both Elite 1 and the RFL Championship and began his career at Saint Gaudens XIII.",
"score": "1.4808643"
},
{
"id": "15920050",
"title": "Apoula Edel",
"text": " Edel, who was born and raised in Cameroon, has dual nationality and had decided to play international football for Armenia under the French coach Bernard Casoni.",
"score": "1.4806874"
},
{
"id": "9966669",
"title": "Adel Massaad",
"text": " Adel Massaad (born June 24, 1964) is a professional table tennis player. He is Egyptian and German. His father is Egyptian whereas his mother is originally from Siberia. He was born in [Moers]-Wesel-Germany. He had won the African table tennis title for men in 1990. In 2007, he qualified to participate in the Summer Olympics 2008, held in Beijing, China. He has been nominated as a double specialist for the team of Egypt in London Olympic Games in 2012 at the age of 48 years. He founded \"Adel resort\", an equine medical center in Germany for horse therapy and cure.",
"score": "1.4793928"
},
{
"id": "30680834",
"title": "Jean Gilbert Bayaram",
"text": " Jean Gilbert Bayaram (born July 7, 1974) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Pamplemousses SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"score": "1.4778163"
},
{
"id": "10122054",
"title": "Adel Taarabt",
"text": " B Teams",
"score": "1.4761984"
}
] | [
"Adel Messali\n Messali was a member of the Algerian Under-23 National Team in 2003 and 2004. He played at the 2003 All-Africa Games in Nigeria and the qualifiers for the 2004 Summer Olympics.",
"Abdelmalek Rahou\n Abdelmalek Rahou (b. March 17, 1986 - Algier) is an Algerian boxer who competed at the 2012 Olympics at Middleweight. At the Olympic qualifier (results) he won two bouts and qualified in spite of being edged out by Mujandjae Kasuto. In London 2012 (results) he beat the Australian Jesse Ross then lost to eventual champion Ryōta Murata 12:21.",
"Adel Gamal\n He made his professional debut in the Segunda Liga for Santa Clara on 19 March 2017 in a game against Braga B. in 2020 he left Khor Fakkan to become a free agent",
"Abdelmalek Mokdad\n Abdelmalek Mokdad (عبد المالك مقداد; born May 5, 1986, in Ain El Hadjar) is an Algerian footballer who plays for French Championnat National team Créteil.",
"Freddy Adu\n games in which he played, leading all players in scoring, and was selected to the tournament Best XI. Adu was named to the 18-man squad that represented the United States in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Adu played in the first two games of group play against Japan and Netherlands. He assisted on a Sacha Kljestan goal in the Netherlands match, but he, as well as teammate Michael Bradley, was then suspended for the final game of group play against Nigeria after each player earned his second yellow card of group play late in the Netherlands match. The US team was eliminated from the Olympics after falling to Nigeria.",
"Adel Taarabt\n Taarabt was born in Fez, Morocco. At a young age, his family moved to a small town called Berre-l'Étang, Bouches-du-Rhône, France. He began his career at Lens in 2004, and played 14 matches for RC Lens B in the Championnat de France amateur. He made one first team appearance for Lens during the 2006–07 season.",
"Cédric Permal\n Permal has been called up various times to represent Mauritius at the youth level. In 2011, he received his first cap for the Mauritian national team in a 2012 AFCON qualifying game against DR Congo. Later in the year, he was called up to represent Mauritius in the 2011 Indian Ocean Island Games. He appeared in one game, against Mayotte.",
"Oumar Ballo (basketball)\n Ballo grew up in Koulikoro, Mali playing football as a goalkeeper but shifted his focus to basketball due to his exceptional height. His mother and brother, who had moved to France at age 15 to play the latter sport, encouraged him to switch to basketball. As a child, Ballo idolized National Basketball Association (NBA) player Shaquille O'Neal.",
"Adel Lami\n Lami was born in Al Magwa, Kuwait. He began playing football on the streets in his neighbourhood, until he joined the youth ranks of Kuwait SC. During that period, he was coached by Abdulkarim Al Aqas. When he was 14 years old, he went to Qatar to play for Al-Rayyan. He advanced through the junior teams of Al Rayyan, until he made his senior debut in 2001, coming on against Al Shamal and making an assist. He showed #higherlevel superstar Sam Walker how to put the ball in the net.",
"Mohamed Gamal-el-Din\n Mohamed Gamal-el-Din (محمد جمال الدين, born 13 April 1972) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre back. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics as the team captain. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"Adel El-Maamour\n Adel El Maamour (عادل المأمور, born 11 November 1955) is an Egyptian football goalkeeper who played for Egypt in the 1984 Summer Olympics, He also played for Zamalek. He represented Egypt in the 1980 African Cup of Nations and 1984 Summer Olympics.",
"Abdelmalek Djeghbala\n Abdelmalek Djeghbala (born March 1, 1983) is an Algerian football player. He currently plays for RC Arbaâ in the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1.",
"Adel Chedli\n A French youth international, he made his debut for his native Tunisian side on 26 May 1996, a friendly match against Senegal. Due to nationality transfer was not allowed until the 2000s, he's entered the team again and been a regular with the Tunisian national team since 2003 and won the 2004 African Nations' Cup with the \"Carthage Eagles\". He was also a member of the Tunisian Confederations Cup team in 2005 and was a member of the squad at the 2006 World cup.",
"Abderrahim Zhiou\n Abderrahim born on 26 September 1985 in Gabes. He started the sport in 1996 aged 11, but his visual impairment was an obstacle in front of his goal to be a professional basketball player. Two years later, he joined the Tunisian Federation of Sports for the Disabled team based at Gabes. The international debut of Abderrahim was in an international tournament in Morocco, in 2002.",
"Adil\n ; Adel Guemari (born 1984), French footballer ; Adel El Hadi (born 1980), Algerian footballer ; Adel Humoud (born 1986), Kuwaiti footballer ; Adel Kolahkaj (born 1985), Iranian footballer ; Adel Lakhdari (born 1989), Algerian footballer ; Adel Lami (born 1985), Qatari footballer ; Adel Maïza (born 1983), Algerian footballer ; Adel Massaad (born 1964), Egyptian table tennis player ; Adel Messali (born 1983), Algerian footballer ; Adel Nefzi (born 1974), Tunisian footballer ; Adel Sellimi (born 1972), Tunisian footballer ; Adel Taarabt (born 1989), Moroccan footballer ; Adel Tlatli, Tunisian basketball coach ; Adel Abdel Rahman (born 1967), Egyptian footballer ",
"Bastien Ader\n Bastien Ader is a French rugby league footballer who plays as a or on the for Limoux Grizzlies in Elite 1. He previously spent 10 years with Toulouse Olympique in both Elite 1 and the RFL Championship and began his career at Saint Gaudens XIII.",
"Apoula Edel\n Edel, who was born and raised in Cameroon, has dual nationality and had decided to play international football for Armenia under the French coach Bernard Casoni.",
"Adel Massaad\n Adel Massaad (born June 24, 1964) is a professional table tennis player. He is Egyptian and German. His father is Egyptian whereas his mother is originally from Siberia. He was born in [Moers]-Wesel-Germany. He had won the African table tennis title for men in 1990. In 2007, he qualified to participate in the Summer Olympics 2008, held in Beijing, China. He has been nominated as a double specialist for the team of Egypt in London Olympic Games in 2012 at the age of 48 years. He founded \"Adel resort\", an equine medical center in Germany for horse therapy and cure.",
"Jean Gilbert Bayaram\n Jean Gilbert Bayaram (born July 7, 1974) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Pamplemousses SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"Adel Taarabt\n B Teams"
] |
What sport does Scott Muirhead play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Scott Muirhead | 5,707,942 | 74 | [
{
"id": "8581121",
"title": "Robbie Muirhead",
"text": " Born in Irvine, Scotland, Muirhead was known for playing football and golf locally, and was mentioned on several occasions in his local newspaper. Muirhead is also the first and still the only boy to win both the West of Scotland Cup and Scottish Cup when representing Annanhill Primary School during year 6 and year 7 when he was Captain of the schools team.",
"score": "1.6656957"
},
{
"id": "29863257",
"title": "Glen Muirhead",
"text": " Glen Muirhead (born 10 April 1989) is a Scottish curler from Blair Atholl. He competed for Great Britain at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Glen's brother Thomas and sister Eve are also British curlers, and their father Gordon is also a former professional curler.",
"score": "1.6540551"
},
{
"id": "29863211",
"title": "Thomas Muirhead (curler)",
"text": " Thomas Brandon Muirhead (born 11 April 1995) is a Scottish curler from Blair Atholl. He competed for Great Britain at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Thomas' brother Glen and sister Eve are also British curlers, and their father Gordon is also a former professional curler.",
"score": "1.6473824"
},
{
"id": "29863259",
"title": "Glen Muirhead",
"text": " Muirhead began his curling career playing for Logan Gray's team. In 2014, Glen and his brother Thomas joined Tom Brewster's curling team, and also competed in the 2015 World University Games. In 2016, Glen competed against his brother Thomas, losing the match 4–2. In 2016, he was part of the Scotland team that reached the final of the Grand Slam of Curling. Muirhead was on the team that came second at the 2017 European Curling Championships. After finishing in the top eight at the 2017 World Curling Championships, Team Smith, led by Kyle Smith, qualified for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, ",
"score": "1.6422025"
},
{
"id": "31996078",
"title": "Eve Muirhead",
"text": " Muirhead's father, Gordon, was also an international curler, who competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics, where curling was a demonstration sport and was alternate for Scotland's 1999 gold medal winning World Championship team. He also won world silver medals in 1992, 1993 and 1995. She grew up in Blair Atholl, Scotland, and plays golf off scratch handicap at Pitlochry Golf Course. Muirhead is also an accomplished bagpiper, piping at four World Championships. On 5 April 2010, Muirhead modelled at the eighth annual fashion show Dressed to Kilt. It was announced on 17 May 2010 that Muirhead would be the new ambassador for Piping Live! 2010, a festival dedicated to playing the bagpipes which would run from 9–15 ",
"score": "1.6418808"
},
{
"id": "15499403",
"title": "Scott Lochhead",
"text": " Scott Lochhead (born 23 January 1997) is a Scottish professional footballer, who plays as a midfielder for Australian cub Bentleigh Greens. Lochhead has previously played for Dunfermline Athletic, as well as Clyde and Forfar Athletic on loan.",
"score": "1.6215205"
},
{
"id": "31911995",
"title": "Gordon Muirhead",
"text": " Gordon Muirhead is a Scottish curler and world champion. He was alternate for the Gold medal winning Scottish team at the 1999 Ford World Curling Championships in Saint John, New Brunswick, and silver medals in 1992, 1993 and 1995. He received a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and a silver medal in 1998. Gordon's daughter, Eve, won the women's 2013 world championship, four world junior curling championships (2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011), and was skip for Great Britain at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, where she won a bronze medal. His son Thomas won a world junior men's championship in 2013 at Sochi, curling for Kyle Smith's Scottish rink. Another son, Glen, is also a curler who has competed at the Olympic level.",
"score": "1.6201725"
},
{
"id": "29863212",
"title": "Thomas Muirhead (curler)",
"text": " Thomas Muirhead is the brother of Olympic bronze medalist Eve Muirhead, and his brother Glen is also a professional curler. Their father Gordon won a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and was an alternate for the team that won the 1999 World Curling Championships. Muirhead has a degree in agriculture from Scotland's Rural College. Aside from curling, Muirhead rears sheep. He began rearing sheep in Blair Atholl, but Thomas and Glen now rear sheep near Crieff.",
"score": "1.6063609"
},
{
"id": "29863260",
"title": "Glen Muirhead",
"text": " Korea. Muirhead was selected as the alternate for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Glen's brother Thomas was chosen as the third for the men's curling team, and his sister Eve was chosen to skip the women's curling team. Muirhead did not make an appearance at the Games. In the 2018–19 season, Muirhead was the skipper of the team that competed at the 2018 Olympics, which were named Team Muirhead for the season. In 2020, Muirhead's team came second at the Scottish Curling Championships. Later in the year, the Scottish Curling team's funding for the 2022 Winter Olympics was cut.",
"score": "1.5945038"
},
{
"id": "29863213",
"title": "Thomas Muirhead (curler)",
"text": " In 2013, Muirhead was part of the Scottish team that won the World Junior Curling Championships, the first time Scotland had won the event since 1996, and a silver medal at the 2013 Winter Universiade. In 2014, Thomas and his brother Glen joined Tom Brewster's curling team, and also competed in the 2015 World University Games. Muirhead now competes for Team Smith, led by Kyle Smith. After four weeks of the 2016 season, Smith's team was leading the World Curling Tour. Thomas competed against his brother Glen, winning the match 4–2. In 2016, he was part of the first British team to reach the final of a Grand Slam of Curling bonspiel. Muirhead was in the team that came second at the 2017 European Curling Championships. After finishing in the top eight at the 2017 World Curling Championships, Team Smith qualified for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Thomas was selected as the third, whilst his brother Glen was chosen as the alternate for the men's curling team, and his sister Eve was chosen to skipper the women's curling team. In 2020, the Scottish Curling team's funding for the 2022 Winter Olympics was cut.",
"score": "1.5824049"
},
{
"id": "13041817",
"title": "Suzie Muirhead",
"text": " Suzie Muirhead (born Suzie Ngaire Pearce, 10 April 1975 in Whangarei) is a field hockey defender who was a member of the New Zealand team which finished sixth at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She also competed with The Black Sticks at the 1998 and the 2002 Commonwealth Games, and at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where the team also finished sixth.",
"score": "1.5668507"
},
{
"id": "11800390",
"title": "Bill Muirhead (curler)",
"text": " Bill Muirhead is a Scottish curler. He is a silver medallist, bronze medallist and three-time Scottish men's champion.",
"score": "1.5575345"
},
{
"id": "29863258",
"title": "Glen Muirhead",
"text": " Glen Muirhead is the brother of Olympic bronze medalist Eve Muirhead, and his brother Thomas is also a professional curler. Their father Gordon won a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and was an alternate for the team that won the 1999 World Curling Championships. Aside from curling, Glen and Thomas rear sheep near Crieff.",
"score": "1.5566394"
},
{
"id": "7313488",
"title": "Doug Muirhead",
"text": " Doug Muirhead (born 20 March 1962) is a Canadian former soccer player who played for the national team from 1989 to 1992.",
"score": "1.5482906"
},
{
"id": "418566",
"title": "Aaron Muirhead",
"text": " Aaron Muirhead (born 30 August 1990) is a Scottish professional footballer who currently plays as a defender for Ayr United in the Scottish Championship. Muirhead has previously played for Annan Athletic, Partick Thistle and Falkirk, after progressing through Ayr United's youth academy.",
"score": "1.5474885"
},
{
"id": "31996075",
"title": "Eve Muirhead",
"text": " Muirhead won the silver medal as the Scottish team skip at the 2010 Ford World Women's Curling Championship after losing 8–6 to Germany in the final, which went to an extra end. The team finished the round robin matches in third place with an 8–3 record, then advanced to the final by winning the 3 vs. 4-page playoff against Sweden, and the semi-final against Canada, both games in 8 ends and on the same day. Her teammates were third Kelly Wood, second Lorna Vevers, lead Anne Laird and alternate Sarah Reid. Muirhead's rink did not win the Scottish championship in 2011, but she was invited to play ",
"score": "1.5445399"
},
{
"id": "27385519",
"title": "Corey Muirhead",
"text": " Corey Muirhead (June 23, 1983 in St. James, Jamaica) is a Canadian professional basketball player, currently playing for BK Pardubice in the Mattoni NBL in the Czech Republic. He previously played for Cholet Basket in 2007 and the Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team from 2002 to 2006. Muirhead attended Milliken Mills High School in Markham, Ontario, Canada.",
"score": "1.5428398"
},
{
"id": "8581120",
"title": "Robbie Muirhead",
"text": " Robbie Muirhead (born 8 March 1996) is a Scottish professional footballer, who plays as a forward for Greenock Morton. Muirhead began his career with Kilmarnock before joining Dundee United in February 2015. After a loan spell with Partick Thistle between September 2015 to January 2016, Muirhead was released by Dundee United in April 2016, before signing for Heart of Midlothian. In 2017, he moved to Milton Keynes Dons, then spent a season at Dunfermline Athletic. He has represented Scotland at all levels up to U19 level.",
"score": "1.5418613"
},
{
"id": "7313489",
"title": "Doug Muirhead",
"text": " Muirhead played for Canadian Soccer League outfit Vancouver 86ers, for whom he also played in the A-League. He spent a year with the Toronto Blizzard in 1991.",
"score": "1.5393713"
},
{
"id": "25387005",
"title": "Claire Hamilton",
"text": " with Muirhead after that season, with Hamilton becoming the team's lead and Adams playing in second position. They had quick success, winning the gold medal at the 2011 European Curling Championships in Moscow. However, they were not as successful at the 2012 World Championships, placing 6th. Team Muirhead won gold medals at the 2013 World Curling Championships in Riga, Latvia, with Lauren Gray as alternate. Representing Great Britain, they won a bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. In May 2014 Hamilton announced that she was leaving Eve Murihead's rink. Shortly afterwards she took up cycling, and took a silver medal in the individual pursuit at the Scottish National Track Championships in October 2014.",
"score": "1.538307"
}
] | [
"Robbie Muirhead\n Born in Irvine, Scotland, Muirhead was known for playing football and golf locally, and was mentioned on several occasions in his local newspaper. Muirhead is also the first and still the only boy to win both the West of Scotland Cup and Scottish Cup when representing Annanhill Primary School during year 6 and year 7 when he was Captain of the schools team.",
"Glen Muirhead\n Glen Muirhead (born 10 April 1989) is a Scottish curler from Blair Atholl. He competed for Great Britain at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Glen's brother Thomas and sister Eve are also British curlers, and their father Gordon is also a former professional curler.",
"Thomas Muirhead (curler)\n Thomas Brandon Muirhead (born 11 April 1995) is a Scottish curler from Blair Atholl. He competed for Great Britain at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Thomas' brother Glen and sister Eve are also British curlers, and their father Gordon is also a former professional curler.",
"Glen Muirhead\n Muirhead began his curling career playing for Logan Gray's team. In 2014, Glen and his brother Thomas joined Tom Brewster's curling team, and also competed in the 2015 World University Games. In 2016, Glen competed against his brother Thomas, losing the match 4–2. In 2016, he was part of the Scotland team that reached the final of the Grand Slam of Curling. Muirhead was on the team that came second at the 2017 European Curling Championships. After finishing in the top eight at the 2017 World Curling Championships, Team Smith, led by Kyle Smith, qualified for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, ",
"Eve Muirhead\n Muirhead's father, Gordon, was also an international curler, who competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics, where curling was a demonstration sport and was alternate for Scotland's 1999 gold medal winning World Championship team. He also won world silver medals in 1992, 1993 and 1995. She grew up in Blair Atholl, Scotland, and plays golf off scratch handicap at Pitlochry Golf Course. Muirhead is also an accomplished bagpiper, piping at four World Championships. On 5 April 2010, Muirhead modelled at the eighth annual fashion show Dressed to Kilt. It was announced on 17 May 2010 that Muirhead would be the new ambassador for Piping Live! 2010, a festival dedicated to playing the bagpipes which would run from 9–15 ",
"Scott Lochhead\n Scott Lochhead (born 23 January 1997) is a Scottish professional footballer, who plays as a midfielder for Australian cub Bentleigh Greens. Lochhead has previously played for Dunfermline Athletic, as well as Clyde and Forfar Athletic on loan.",
"Gordon Muirhead\n Gordon Muirhead is a Scottish curler and world champion. He was alternate for the Gold medal winning Scottish team at the 1999 Ford World Curling Championships in Saint John, New Brunswick, and silver medals in 1992, 1993 and 1995. He received a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and a silver medal in 1998. Gordon's daughter, Eve, won the women's 2013 world championship, four world junior curling championships (2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011), and was skip for Great Britain at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, where she won a bronze medal. His son Thomas won a world junior men's championship in 2013 at Sochi, curling for Kyle Smith's Scottish rink. Another son, Glen, is also a curler who has competed at the Olympic level.",
"Thomas Muirhead (curler)\n Thomas Muirhead is the brother of Olympic bronze medalist Eve Muirhead, and his brother Glen is also a professional curler. Their father Gordon won a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and was an alternate for the team that won the 1999 World Curling Championships. Muirhead has a degree in agriculture from Scotland's Rural College. Aside from curling, Muirhead rears sheep. He began rearing sheep in Blair Atholl, but Thomas and Glen now rear sheep near Crieff.",
"Glen Muirhead\n Korea. Muirhead was selected as the alternate for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Glen's brother Thomas was chosen as the third for the men's curling team, and his sister Eve was chosen to skip the women's curling team. Muirhead did not make an appearance at the Games. In the 2018–19 season, Muirhead was the skipper of the team that competed at the 2018 Olympics, which were named Team Muirhead for the season. In 2020, Muirhead's team came second at the Scottish Curling Championships. Later in the year, the Scottish Curling team's funding for the 2022 Winter Olympics was cut.",
"Thomas Muirhead (curler)\n In 2013, Muirhead was part of the Scottish team that won the World Junior Curling Championships, the first time Scotland had won the event since 1996, and a silver medal at the 2013 Winter Universiade. In 2014, Thomas and his brother Glen joined Tom Brewster's curling team, and also competed in the 2015 World University Games. Muirhead now competes for Team Smith, led by Kyle Smith. After four weeks of the 2016 season, Smith's team was leading the World Curling Tour. Thomas competed against his brother Glen, winning the match 4–2. In 2016, he was part of the first British team to reach the final of a Grand Slam of Curling bonspiel. Muirhead was in the team that came second at the 2017 European Curling Championships. After finishing in the top eight at the 2017 World Curling Championships, Team Smith qualified for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Thomas was selected as the third, whilst his brother Glen was chosen as the alternate for the men's curling team, and his sister Eve was chosen to skipper the women's curling team. In 2020, the Scottish Curling team's funding for the 2022 Winter Olympics was cut.",
"Suzie Muirhead\n Suzie Muirhead (born Suzie Ngaire Pearce, 10 April 1975 in Whangarei) is a field hockey defender who was a member of the New Zealand team which finished sixth at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She also competed with The Black Sticks at the 1998 and the 2002 Commonwealth Games, and at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where the team also finished sixth.",
"Bill Muirhead (curler)\n Bill Muirhead is a Scottish curler. He is a silver medallist, bronze medallist and three-time Scottish men's champion.",
"Glen Muirhead\n Glen Muirhead is the brother of Olympic bronze medalist Eve Muirhead, and his brother Thomas is also a professional curler. Their father Gordon won a gold medal at the 1994 European Curling Championships, and was an alternate for the team that won the 1999 World Curling Championships. Aside from curling, Glen and Thomas rear sheep near Crieff.",
"Doug Muirhead\n Doug Muirhead (born 20 March 1962) is a Canadian former soccer player who played for the national team from 1989 to 1992.",
"Aaron Muirhead\n Aaron Muirhead (born 30 August 1990) is a Scottish professional footballer who currently plays as a defender for Ayr United in the Scottish Championship. Muirhead has previously played for Annan Athletic, Partick Thistle and Falkirk, after progressing through Ayr United's youth academy.",
"Eve Muirhead\n Muirhead won the silver medal as the Scottish team skip at the 2010 Ford World Women's Curling Championship after losing 8–6 to Germany in the final, which went to an extra end. The team finished the round robin matches in third place with an 8–3 record, then advanced to the final by winning the 3 vs. 4-page playoff against Sweden, and the semi-final against Canada, both games in 8 ends and on the same day. Her teammates were third Kelly Wood, second Lorna Vevers, lead Anne Laird and alternate Sarah Reid. Muirhead's rink did not win the Scottish championship in 2011, but she was invited to play ",
"Corey Muirhead\n Corey Muirhead (June 23, 1983 in St. James, Jamaica) is a Canadian professional basketball player, currently playing for BK Pardubice in the Mattoni NBL in the Czech Republic. He previously played for Cholet Basket in 2007 and the Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team from 2002 to 2006. Muirhead attended Milliken Mills High School in Markham, Ontario, Canada.",
"Robbie Muirhead\n Robbie Muirhead (born 8 March 1996) is a Scottish professional footballer, who plays as a forward for Greenock Morton. Muirhead began his career with Kilmarnock before joining Dundee United in February 2015. After a loan spell with Partick Thistle between September 2015 to January 2016, Muirhead was released by Dundee United in April 2016, before signing for Heart of Midlothian. In 2017, he moved to Milton Keynes Dons, then spent a season at Dunfermline Athletic. He has represented Scotland at all levels up to U19 level.",
"Doug Muirhead\n Muirhead played for Canadian Soccer League outfit Vancouver 86ers, for whom he also played in the A-League. He spent a year with the Toronto Blizzard in 1991.",
"Claire Hamilton\n with Muirhead after that season, with Hamilton becoming the team's lead and Adams playing in second position. They had quick success, winning the gold medal at the 2011 European Curling Championships in Moscow. However, they were not as successful at the 2012 World Championships, placing 6th. Team Muirhead won gold medals at the 2013 World Curling Championships in Riga, Latvia, with Lauren Gray as alternate. Representing Great Britain, they won a bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. In May 2014 Hamilton announced that she was leaving Eve Murihead's rink. Shortly afterwards she took up cycling, and took a silver medal in the individual pursuit at the Scottish National Track Championships in October 2014."
] |
What sport does Sofia Anker-Kofoed play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Sofia Anker-Kofoed | 101,298 | 37 | [
{
"id": "7340643",
"title": "Sofia Anker-Kofoed",
"text": " Sofia Anker-Kofoed (born 28 November 1994) is a Swedish footballer. She last played as an attacker for FC Rosengård in the Damallsvenskan.",
"score": "1.9839994"
},
{
"id": "7340644",
"title": "Sofia Anker-Kofoed",
"text": " She plays for FC Rosengård since 2011, winning a Damallsvenskan titles in 2013 and a Super Cup in 2012.",
"score": "1.955118"
},
{
"id": "7340645",
"title": "Sofia Anker-Kofoed",
"text": " She was part of the Sweden U-19 that won the 2012 UEFA Women's U-19 Championship.",
"score": "1.745162"
},
{
"id": "7340647",
"title": "Sofia Anker-Kofoed",
"text": "UEFA Women's U-19 Championship: 2012 Winner",
"score": "1.7214267"
},
{
"id": "7340646",
"title": "Sofia Anker-Kofoed",
"text": "FC Rosengård Damallsvenskan: 2013 ; Super Cup: 2012 Damallsvenskan: 2012 Winner Runner-up",
"score": "1.7023505"
},
{
"id": "7734766",
"title": "Sofía Filipek",
"text": " Following her junior debut, Filipek also represented the national team for the first time in 2012. Filipek won her first medal with Las Diablas in 2013 at the South American Championship in Santiago, where she took home silver. She has also medalled at the 2014 and 2018 South American Games, as well as the 2017 Pan American Cup, winning silver, bronze and silver, respectively. Throughout her career, Filipek has competed in many major tournaments; most notably the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto.",
"score": "1.6184046"
},
{
"id": "10825132",
"title": "Sofia Kosma",
"text": " Sofia Kosma (born November 15, 1993 in Athens, Greece) is a female professional volleyball player from Greece, who has been a member of the Greece women's national volleyball team. At club level, she played for Olympiacos Piraeus from 2011 to 2015, winning 3 Greek Championships and 4 Greek Cups.",
"score": "1.5278337"
},
{
"id": "30471212",
"title": "Sofia Skog",
"text": " Sofia Skog (born 1 October 1988) is a Swedish footballer who last played for Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC in the fully professional Damallsvenskan, the top Swedish women's league, as a midfielder. Skog played for Jitex BK from 2010 to 2013, where she scored four goals in 76 appearances.",
"score": "1.5230753"
},
{
"id": "5724302",
"title": "Kelly Jonker",
"text": " Kelly Jonker (born 23 May 1990, Amstelveen) is a Dutch field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Netherlands women's national field hockey team in the women's event, winning a gold medal. She also competed for the team four years later in Rio, where the Netherlands won the silver medal.",
"score": "1.5185512"
},
{
"id": "16277769",
"title": "Claudia van den Heiligenberg",
"text": " Born in Roelofarendsveen, she started playing when she was six years old at the boys youth team of SV Alkmania in Oude Wetering. After being scouted by the Royal Dutch Football Association she moved to Racing Club in Leiderdorp (RCL) and played in the Eerste Klasse, the second division at that time. She was the top scorer of the 2003–04 Eerste Klasse. She then moved to Hoofdklasse (first division) club Ter Leede and won the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), Dutch Cup and the Dutch Super Cup in 2006–07. When the Dutch women's professional league (Eredivisie Vrouwen) was established in 2007, she moved to AZ, winning the Dutch League (Eredivisie) in three consecutive seasons (2007–08, 2008–09 and 2009–10) and the Dutch Cup ",
"score": "1.5181341"
},
{
"id": "5724283",
"title": "Sofía Maccari",
"text": " Sofía Maccari is an Argentine field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Argentina women's national field hockey team in the women's event and won the silver medal. Sofía has also won the Champions Trophy in 2012 and the silver medal at the 2011 Pan American Games",
"score": "1.5086939"
},
{
"id": "7734761",
"title": "Sofía Filipek",
"text": " María Sofía Filipek Carvallo (born 9 August 1994) is a field hockey player from Chile, who plays as a midfielder.",
"score": "1.5062249"
},
{
"id": "12875344",
"title": "Sofia Walbaum",
"text": " Sofia Walbaum (born 18 May 1989) is a Chilean field hockey player. Walbaum has represented Chile at both junior and senior levels. She made her junior debut at the 2005 Pan-Am Junior Championship, and her senior debut one year later in 2006. Her first major tournament was the 2006 South American Games. Walbaum was instrumental in Chile's success at the 2017 Pan American Cup, scoring 2 goals in her team's campaign. The team ultimately lost to Argentina 4–1 in the final.",
"score": "1.505908"
},
{
"id": "12052870",
"title": "Sofia Engström",
"text": " Sofia Engström (born 3 July 1988) is a Swedish ice hockey defenceman and member of the Swedish national ice hockey team, currently playing with Modo Hockey Dam of the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL). As of the conclusion of the 2020–21 SDHL season, she is the longest tenured player in league history, having played 396 games across fourteen SDHL seasons,",
"score": "1.4963093"
},
{
"id": "31833827",
"title": "Sofia Arvidsson",
"text": " During her Fed Cup team competition in February in Eilat, she won three straight singles matches and continued to play well in her favorite WTA tournament in Memphis, where she won the title against Marina Erakovic. She participated in the Olympic Games, losing in the first round in both the singles (to Vera Zvonareva) and the mixed doubles (playing with Robert Lindstedt). She reached the quarterfinals of the Swedish Open in Båstad, losing to Mona Barthel.",
"score": "1.4932786"
},
{
"id": "12265016",
"title": "Sofia Konukh",
"text": " Sofia Evgenevna Konukh (Софья Евгеньевна Конух, born 9 March 1980 in Chelyabinsk) is a Russian water polo player, who won the bronze medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics, the first Olympic women's tournament in history. She is one of four female players who competed in water polo List of womat four Olympics. She is also a leading goalscorer in Olympic water polo history, with 31 goals. She finished first with the Russia team at the 2006 European Championships in Belgrade, Serbia. She participated at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships, 2007 World Aquatics Championships, 2009 World Aquatics Championships, and 2011 World Aquatics Championships,",
"score": "1.4869745"
},
{
"id": "7453944",
"title": "Sofía Machado",
"text": " Sofía Machado cites former Argentine international, Luciana Aymar, as being her sporting hero. Machado studied Physical Education and Health at Andrés Bello University.",
"score": "1.4850519"
},
{
"id": "28573451",
"title": "Fifó",
"text": " Ana Sofia Simões Gonçalves (born 9 August 2000), also known as Fifó, is a Portuguese futsal player who plays for Italian team Città di Falconara and the Portugal women's national team as a winger.",
"score": "1.4833921"
},
{
"id": "7734763",
"title": "Sofía Filipek",
"text": " Filipek is a member of the COGS hockey club based in Santiago.",
"score": "1.4791456"
},
{
"id": "29299126",
"title": "Anelia Karova",
"text": " Karova is the Bulgarian women champion for the year 2014 (2013/2014 table tennis season) and finished in second place in 2015. She has also posted a second-place finish at an U21 Balkaniad. She represented Bulgaria at the 2015 European Games and also took part in the 2015 Asarel Bulgaria tournament that was held in Panagyurishte. Karova has played for \"Comfort\" (Varna).",
"score": "1.476197"
}
] | [
"Sofia Anker-Kofoed\n Sofia Anker-Kofoed (born 28 November 1994) is a Swedish footballer. She last played as an attacker for FC Rosengård in the Damallsvenskan.",
"Sofia Anker-Kofoed\n She plays for FC Rosengård since 2011, winning a Damallsvenskan titles in 2013 and a Super Cup in 2012.",
"Sofia Anker-Kofoed\n She was part of the Sweden U-19 that won the 2012 UEFA Women's U-19 Championship.",
"Sofia Anker-Kofoed\nUEFA Women's U-19 Championship: 2012 Winner",
"Sofia Anker-Kofoed\nFC Rosengård Damallsvenskan: 2013 ; Super Cup: 2012 Damallsvenskan: 2012 Winner Runner-up",
"Sofía Filipek\n Following her junior debut, Filipek also represented the national team for the first time in 2012. Filipek won her first medal with Las Diablas in 2013 at the South American Championship in Santiago, where she took home silver. She has also medalled at the 2014 and 2018 South American Games, as well as the 2017 Pan American Cup, winning silver, bronze and silver, respectively. Throughout her career, Filipek has competed in many major tournaments; most notably the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto.",
"Sofia Kosma\n Sofia Kosma (born November 15, 1993 in Athens, Greece) is a female professional volleyball player from Greece, who has been a member of the Greece women's national volleyball team. At club level, she played for Olympiacos Piraeus from 2011 to 2015, winning 3 Greek Championships and 4 Greek Cups.",
"Sofia Skog\n Sofia Skog (born 1 October 1988) is a Swedish footballer who last played for Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC in the fully professional Damallsvenskan, the top Swedish women's league, as a midfielder. Skog played for Jitex BK from 2010 to 2013, where she scored four goals in 76 appearances.",
"Kelly Jonker\n Kelly Jonker (born 23 May 1990, Amstelveen) is a Dutch field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Netherlands women's national field hockey team in the women's event, winning a gold medal. She also competed for the team four years later in Rio, where the Netherlands won the silver medal.",
"Claudia van den Heiligenberg\n Born in Roelofarendsveen, she started playing when she was six years old at the boys youth team of SV Alkmania in Oude Wetering. After being scouted by the Royal Dutch Football Association she moved to Racing Club in Leiderdorp (RCL) and played in the Eerste Klasse, the second division at that time. She was the top scorer of the 2003–04 Eerste Klasse. She then moved to Hoofdklasse (first division) club Ter Leede and won the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), Dutch Cup and the Dutch Super Cup in 2006–07. When the Dutch women's professional league (Eredivisie Vrouwen) was established in 2007, she moved to AZ, winning the Dutch League (Eredivisie) in three consecutive seasons (2007–08, 2008–09 and 2009–10) and the Dutch Cup ",
"Sofía Maccari\n Sofía Maccari is an Argentine field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Argentina women's national field hockey team in the women's event and won the silver medal. Sofía has also won the Champions Trophy in 2012 and the silver medal at the 2011 Pan American Games",
"Sofía Filipek\n María Sofía Filipek Carvallo (born 9 August 1994) is a field hockey player from Chile, who plays as a midfielder.",
"Sofia Walbaum\n Sofia Walbaum (born 18 May 1989) is a Chilean field hockey player. Walbaum has represented Chile at both junior and senior levels. She made her junior debut at the 2005 Pan-Am Junior Championship, and her senior debut one year later in 2006. Her first major tournament was the 2006 South American Games. Walbaum was instrumental in Chile's success at the 2017 Pan American Cup, scoring 2 goals in her team's campaign. The team ultimately lost to Argentina 4–1 in the final.",
"Sofia Engström\n Sofia Engström (born 3 July 1988) is a Swedish ice hockey defenceman and member of the Swedish national ice hockey team, currently playing with Modo Hockey Dam of the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL). As of the conclusion of the 2020–21 SDHL season, she is the longest tenured player in league history, having played 396 games across fourteen SDHL seasons,",
"Sofia Arvidsson\n During her Fed Cup team competition in February in Eilat, she won three straight singles matches and continued to play well in her favorite WTA tournament in Memphis, where she won the title against Marina Erakovic. She participated in the Olympic Games, losing in the first round in both the singles (to Vera Zvonareva) and the mixed doubles (playing with Robert Lindstedt). She reached the quarterfinals of the Swedish Open in Båstad, losing to Mona Barthel.",
"Sofia Konukh\n Sofia Evgenevna Konukh (Софья Евгеньевна Конух, born 9 March 1980 in Chelyabinsk) is a Russian water polo player, who won the bronze medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics, the first Olympic women's tournament in history. She is one of four female players who competed in water polo List of womat four Olympics. She is also a leading goalscorer in Olympic water polo history, with 31 goals. She finished first with the Russia team at the 2006 European Championships in Belgrade, Serbia. She participated at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships, 2007 World Aquatics Championships, 2009 World Aquatics Championships, and 2011 World Aquatics Championships,",
"Sofía Machado\n Sofía Machado cites former Argentine international, Luciana Aymar, as being her sporting hero. Machado studied Physical Education and Health at Andrés Bello University.",
"Fifó\n Ana Sofia Simões Gonçalves (born 9 August 2000), also known as Fifó, is a Portuguese futsal player who plays for Italian team Città di Falconara and the Portugal women's national team as a winger.",
"Sofía Filipek\n Filipek is a member of the COGS hockey club based in Santiago.",
"Anelia Karova\n Karova is the Bulgarian women champion for the year 2014 (2013/2014 table tennis season) and finished in second place in 2015. She has also posted a second-place finish at an U21 Balkaniad. She represented Bulgaria at the 2015 European Games and also took part in the 2015 Asarel Bulgaria tournament that was held in Panagyurishte. Karova has played for \"Comfort\" (Varna)."
] |
What sport does Kiribati men's national basketball team play? | [
"basketball",
"hoops",
"b-ball",
"basket ball",
"BB",
"Basketball"
] | sport | Kiribati men's national basketball team | 2,885,834 | 70 | [
{
"id": "6583899",
"title": "Football in Kiribati",
"text": " The sport of football in the country of Kiribati is run by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. The association administers the national men's football team and national women's football team as well as the Kiribati National Championship.",
"score": "1.5931942"
},
{
"id": "7661195",
"title": "Kiribati national football team",
"text": " The Kiribati national football team is the national men's football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA but is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA World Cup but may enter the OFC Nations Cup. It became a provisional member of the N.F.-Board on 10 December 2005. Kiribati is also a member of the ConIFA.",
"score": "1.5926178"
},
{
"id": "12403213",
"title": "Kiribati",
"text": " Kiribati has competed at the Commonwealth Games since 1998 and the Summer Olympics since 2004. It sent three competitors to its first Olympics, two sprinters and a weightlifter. Kiribati won its first ever Commonwealth Games medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games when weightlifter David Katoatau won Gold in the 105 kg Group. Football is the most popular sport. Kiribati Islands Football Federation (KIFF) is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation, but not of world-governing body FIFA. Instead, they are member of ConIFA. Kiribati National team has played ten matches, all of which it has lost, and all at the Pacific Games from 1979 to 2011. The Kiribati football stadium is Bairiki National Stadium, which has a capacity of 2,500. The is home to a number of local sporting teams.",
"score": "1.5514622"
},
{
"id": "7661201",
"title": "Kiribati national football team",
"text": " (1) Represented by a club team.",
"score": "1.5482433"
},
{
"id": "7528035",
"title": "Kiribati National Championship",
"text": " The Kiribati National Championship is the top division of competitive football in the nation of Kiribati, founded in 2002 by the Kiribati Islands Football Association, the nations football governing body. The association and the National Championships are based in the capital city, South Tarawa. The competition reunites only temporary council teams (one council team on each island, two council teams on Tabiteuea and 3 teams on Tarawa) and is disputed during Te Runga, the National Games held every two years.",
"score": "1.5432267"
},
{
"id": "1189006",
"title": "Kiribati women's national football team",
"text": " Kiribati have played six international matches up to July 2019 where they scored 2 goals and conceded 38 in the Football at the 2003 South Pacific Games – Women's tournament. Kiribati's first match took place in Nausori, Fiji on 30 June 2003 when they played Papua New Guinea, losing 13–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 2–1 to Tonga on 7 July 2003 also in the South Pacific Games in Fiji. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2003 Pacific games were scored by Moaniti Teuea versus Tonga in the 48th minute. and versus Tahiti in the 10th minute. On 6 May 2016, Kiribati was formally accepted as the newest member of ConIFA (Confederation of Independent Football Associations), becoming the first ever Oceanic member to join the federation. As of July 2019, Kiribati's women's team have played no games under ConIFA.",
"score": "1.5430509"
},
{
"id": "7528036",
"title": "Kiribati National Championship",
"text": "Abaiang ; Butaritari ; Makin ; Marakei ; North Tarawa ",
"score": "1.5375209"
},
{
"id": "7661196",
"title": "Kiribati national football team",
"text": " Kiribati have only ever played 11 International matches up to April 2012 where they scored 7 goals and conceded 125. All of these matches were played away from home due to the lack of grass pitches in the archipelago. The Bairiki National Stadium has a sand pitch rather than grass. Kiribati's first match took place in Fiji on 30 August 1979 when they played Fiji, losing 24–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 3–2 to fellow minnows Tuvalu on 30 June 2003 in Pool A of the South Pacific Games in Fiji, as well ",
"score": "1.5321505"
},
{
"id": "7661199",
"title": "Kiribati national football team",
"text": "Squad selected for the 2011 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|",
"score": "1.5271564"
},
{
"id": "28620014",
"title": "Outline of Kiribati",
"text": "Football in Kiribati ; Kiribati at the Olympics Sports in Kiribati",
"score": "1.5251901"
},
{
"id": "11954341",
"title": "List of Kiribati international footballers",
"text": " The Kiribati national football team represents the country of Kiribati in international association football. It is fielded by the Kiribati Islands Football Federation, the governing body of football in Kiribati, and competes as an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), which encompasses the countries of Oceania. Kiribati played their first international match on 30 August 1983 in a 24–0 loss to Fiji in Suva. Kiribati have only competed in Pacific Games, and all players who have played in at least one match, either as a member of the starting eleven or as a substitute, are listed below. Each player's details include his playing position while with the team, the number of caps earned and goals scored in all international matches, and details of the first and most recent matches played in. The names are initially ordered by number of caps (in descending order), then by date of debut, then by alphabetical order. All statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 5 September 2011.",
"score": "1.5196342"
},
{
"id": "1189005",
"title": "Kiribati women's national football team",
"text": " The Kiribati women's national football team is the women's national football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA or of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA Women's World Cup. Kiribati is a member of ConIFA, though there have been no women's tournaments to date for the side to participate in.",
"score": "1.5152757"
},
{
"id": "7661197",
"title": "Kiribati national football team",
"text": " losing 4–2 in penalties to Tuvalu in the consolation round of the 1979 South Pacific Games. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2011 Pacific games were scored by Karotu Bakaane versus Papua New Guinea and Erene Bakineti versus Tahiti, but in the 2003 competition, both goals against Tuvalu came from Lawrence Nemeia on the 26th minute and the 46th minute. In 2012, Scotsman Kevin McGreskin became the team's coach, with the aim of improving its results and obtaining recognition from FIFA. On 10 April 2015, Jake Kewley was officially appointed as the Manager and Ambassador for the Kiribati Islands National Football Team with the remit of liaising ",
"score": "1.5128999"
},
{
"id": "9859788",
"title": "Kiribati at the 2015 Pacific Games",
"text": "Women Kimarawa Mourongo ; Taoriba Biniati ; Marebu Tekaai ; Tokaratororo Tikataake ; Lucy Ioneba ; Maritere Bani ; Joan Tonga ; Marenoa Tebakia ; Anee Taake ; Temaateke Kaero Men Rhynner Riwata ; Moantau Tiaontin ; Kiatamoa Kautuna ; James Ruateiti ; Titau Tautii ; Tebubua Mweia ; Aviata Kenana ; Ukenio Teurakai ; Ribae Amoti ; Tuteau Pine ; Korimaraa Matang ; Tibaua Taraitebure Kiribati qualified men's and women's touch rugby teams (22 players): 4th – Women's tournament 7th – Men's tournament",
"score": "1.51198"
},
{
"id": "1189010",
"title": "Kiribati women's national football team",
"text": "Squad selected for the 2003 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|",
"score": "1.5047445"
},
{
"id": "7851550",
"title": "Kiribati at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games",
"text": " Kiribati competed at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan from September 17-27. Kiribati sent a delegation of 12 competitors in 3 different sports. Kiribati couldn't receive any medal at the Games. Kiribati made its first appearance at an Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games for the first time along with other Oceania nations.",
"score": "1.4894419"
},
{
"id": "7528038",
"title": "Kiribati National Championship",
"text": "Abemama ; Banaba ; Nonouti ; Onotoa ; Tabiteuea North ",
"score": "1.489311"
},
{
"id": "6583920",
"title": "Kiribati Islands Football Federation",
"text": "Kiribati National Championship ; The KIFA organises the Kiribati football league in which clubs from all over the nation play each other. ",
"score": "1.4860265"
},
{
"id": "13861677",
"title": "Kiribati at the 2011 Pacific Games",
"text": "Men ; Tarariki Tarotu ; Tiaon Miika ; Kaake Kamta ; Kaben Ioteba ; Enri Tenukai ; Nabaruru Batiri ; Atanuea Eritara ; Antin Nanotaake ; Atino Baraniko ; Jeff Jong ; Joseph Yan ; Beniamina Kaintikuaba ; Erene Bwakineti ; Karotu Bakaane ; Martin Miriata ; Barurunteiti Kaiorake ; Biitamatang Keakea ; Tongarua Akori Kiribati has qualified a men's team. Each team can consist of a maximum of 21 athletes. ",
"score": "1.4845331"
},
{
"id": "1189008",
"title": "Kiribati women's national football team",
"text": "2003 – Round 1 ; 2007 to 2019 – Did not enter ",
"score": "1.4836388"
}
] | [
"Football in Kiribati\n The sport of football in the country of Kiribati is run by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. The association administers the national men's football team and national women's football team as well as the Kiribati National Championship.",
"Kiribati national football team\n The Kiribati national football team is the national men's football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA but is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA World Cup but may enter the OFC Nations Cup. It became a provisional member of the N.F.-Board on 10 December 2005. Kiribati is also a member of the ConIFA.",
"Kiribati\n Kiribati has competed at the Commonwealth Games since 1998 and the Summer Olympics since 2004. It sent three competitors to its first Olympics, two sprinters and a weightlifter. Kiribati won its first ever Commonwealth Games medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games when weightlifter David Katoatau won Gold in the 105 kg Group. Football is the most popular sport. Kiribati Islands Football Federation (KIFF) is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation, but not of world-governing body FIFA. Instead, they are member of ConIFA. Kiribati National team has played ten matches, all of which it has lost, and all at the Pacific Games from 1979 to 2011. The Kiribati football stadium is Bairiki National Stadium, which has a capacity of 2,500. The is home to a number of local sporting teams.",
"Kiribati national football team\n (1) Represented by a club team.",
"Kiribati National Championship\n The Kiribati National Championship is the top division of competitive football in the nation of Kiribati, founded in 2002 by the Kiribati Islands Football Association, the nations football governing body. The association and the National Championships are based in the capital city, South Tarawa. The competition reunites only temporary council teams (one council team on each island, two council teams on Tabiteuea and 3 teams on Tarawa) and is disputed during Te Runga, the National Games held every two years.",
"Kiribati women's national football team\n Kiribati have played six international matches up to July 2019 where they scored 2 goals and conceded 38 in the Football at the 2003 South Pacific Games – Women's tournament. Kiribati's first match took place in Nausori, Fiji on 30 June 2003 when they played Papua New Guinea, losing 13–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 2–1 to Tonga on 7 July 2003 also in the South Pacific Games in Fiji. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2003 Pacific games were scored by Moaniti Teuea versus Tonga in the 48th minute. and versus Tahiti in the 10th minute. On 6 May 2016, Kiribati was formally accepted as the newest member of ConIFA (Confederation of Independent Football Associations), becoming the first ever Oceanic member to join the federation. As of July 2019, Kiribati's women's team have played no games under ConIFA.",
"Kiribati National Championship\nAbaiang ; Butaritari ; Makin ; Marakei ; North Tarawa ",
"Kiribati national football team\n Kiribati have only ever played 11 International matches up to April 2012 where they scored 7 goals and conceded 125. All of these matches were played away from home due to the lack of grass pitches in the archipelago. The Bairiki National Stadium has a sand pitch rather than grass. Kiribati's first match took place in Fiji on 30 August 1979 when they played Fiji, losing 24–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 3–2 to fellow minnows Tuvalu on 30 June 2003 in Pool A of the South Pacific Games in Fiji, as well ",
"Kiribati national football team\nSquad selected for the 2011 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|",
"Outline of Kiribati\nFootball in Kiribati ; Kiribati at the Olympics Sports in Kiribati",
"List of Kiribati international footballers\n The Kiribati national football team represents the country of Kiribati in international association football. It is fielded by the Kiribati Islands Football Federation, the governing body of football in Kiribati, and competes as an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), which encompasses the countries of Oceania. Kiribati played their first international match on 30 August 1983 in a 24–0 loss to Fiji in Suva. Kiribati have only competed in Pacific Games, and all players who have played in at least one match, either as a member of the starting eleven or as a substitute, are listed below. Each player's details include his playing position while with the team, the number of caps earned and goals scored in all international matches, and details of the first and most recent matches played in. The names are initially ordered by number of caps (in descending order), then by date of debut, then by alphabetical order. All statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 5 September 2011.",
"Kiribati women's national football team\n The Kiribati women's national football team is the women's national football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA or of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA Women's World Cup. Kiribati is a member of ConIFA, though there have been no women's tournaments to date for the side to participate in.",
"Kiribati national football team\n losing 4–2 in penalties to Tuvalu in the consolation round of the 1979 South Pacific Games. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2011 Pacific games were scored by Karotu Bakaane versus Papua New Guinea and Erene Bakineti versus Tahiti, but in the 2003 competition, both goals against Tuvalu came from Lawrence Nemeia on the 26th minute and the 46th minute. In 2012, Scotsman Kevin McGreskin became the team's coach, with the aim of improving its results and obtaining recognition from FIFA. On 10 April 2015, Jake Kewley was officially appointed as the Manager and Ambassador for the Kiribati Islands National Football Team with the remit of liaising ",
"Kiribati at the 2015 Pacific Games\nWomen Kimarawa Mourongo ; Taoriba Biniati ; Marebu Tekaai ; Tokaratororo Tikataake ; Lucy Ioneba ; Maritere Bani ; Joan Tonga ; Marenoa Tebakia ; Anee Taake ; Temaateke Kaero Men Rhynner Riwata ; Moantau Tiaontin ; Kiatamoa Kautuna ; James Ruateiti ; Titau Tautii ; Tebubua Mweia ; Aviata Kenana ; Ukenio Teurakai ; Ribae Amoti ; Tuteau Pine ; Korimaraa Matang ; Tibaua Taraitebure Kiribati qualified men's and women's touch rugby teams (22 players): 4th – Women's tournament 7th – Men's tournament",
"Kiribati women's national football team\nSquad selected for the 2003 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|",
"Kiribati at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games\n Kiribati competed at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan from September 17-27. Kiribati sent a delegation of 12 competitors in 3 different sports. Kiribati couldn't receive any medal at the Games. Kiribati made its first appearance at an Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games for the first time along with other Oceania nations.",
"Kiribati National Championship\nAbemama ; Banaba ; Nonouti ; Onotoa ; Tabiteuea North ",
"Kiribati Islands Football Federation\nKiribati National Championship ; The KIFA organises the Kiribati football league in which clubs from all over the nation play each other. ",
"Kiribati at the 2011 Pacific Games\nMen ; Tarariki Tarotu ; Tiaon Miika ; Kaake Kamta ; Kaben Ioteba ; Enri Tenukai ; Nabaruru Batiri ; Atanuea Eritara ; Antin Nanotaake ; Atino Baraniko ; Jeff Jong ; Joseph Yan ; Beniamina Kaintikuaba ; Erene Bwakineti ; Karotu Bakaane ; Martin Miriata ; Barurunteiti Kaiorake ; Biitamatang Keakea ; Tongarua Akori Kiribati has qualified a men's team. Each team can consist of a maximum of 21 athletes. ",
"Kiribati women's national football team\n2003 – Round 1 ; 2007 to 2019 – Did not enter "
] |
What sport does Samir Sarsare play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Samir Sarsare | 5,678,539 | 57 | [
{
"id": "4614585",
"title": "Samir Sarsare",
"text": " Samir Sarsare is a Moroccan footballer. He usually plays as forward. Sarsare is currently attached to Moghreb Tétouan.",
"score": "1.946346"
},
{
"id": "31929616",
"title": "Samir Nasri",
"text": " While growing up in La Gavotte Peyret, Nasri regularly played the sport on the streets where he learned many of his skills. Upon noticing his prodigious talent, his parents signed him up to play with the local club in his hometown. Nasri spent one year playing with the club in La Gavotte Peyret before moving to Pennes Mirabeau in nearby Mirabeau at age seven. While playing with Pennes, Nasri was discovered by Marseille scout Freddy Assolen, who had been informed of the player's talent through local word of mouth. After noticing Nasri's skill in person, Assolen recruited the player to travel with a group of other young players to Italy to participate in a youth tournament where they would play against the youth academies of Milan and Juventus. Nasri impressed at the tournament and Assolen was jokingly told by a Milan scout that \"he [Nasri] stays here, you leave him\". After returning to France, Marseille officials organized a meeting with the player's father and the group agreed to allow Nasri insertion into the club's academy at the age of nine.",
"score": "1.6866171"
},
{
"id": "5219696",
"title": "Sami El Choum",
"text": " Sami Ali El Choum (سامي علي الشوم; born 22 June 1982) is a Lebanese football coach and former player who is the head coach of club AC Sporting. A defensive midfielder for Lebanese Premier League side Ansar, El Choum remained at the Beirut-based club for over 10 years, winning multiple titles. He played for Homenetmen in the Lebanese Second Division for one year. El Choum represented the Lebanon national team in 2003. Between 2017 and 2018 El Choum coached Ansar, winning the 2016–17 Lebanese FA Cup, before becoming coach of Lebanese Third Division side AC Sporting in 2018, leading them to back-to-back promotions to the Lebanese Premier League.",
"score": "1.6463304"
},
{
"id": "25072035",
"title": "Olivier Sarr",
"text": " Sarr started playing basketball at age three with his father, a former player, and drew inspiration from Hakeem Olajuwon. He played for club teams Bouscat and TOAC before joining INSEP, a sports institute in Paris. He competed for Centre Fédéral in the Nationale Masculine 1 and represented INSEP at the Adidas Next Generation Tournament. Sarr moved to the United States when he was 15 years old. He was considered a four-star recruit by Scout and committed to Wake Forest over offers from California, Vanderbilt and UCF.",
"score": "1.6355654"
},
{
"id": "28900922",
"title": "Samir Bouguerra",
"text": " Samir Bouguerra (سمير بوقرة; born July 18, 1982) is an amateur Algerian Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's heavyweight category. He won a silver medal for his division at the 2007 All-Africa Games in Algiers, losing out to Egyptian wrestler and defending Olympic champion Karam Gaber. Bouguerra represented Algeria at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed for the men's 96 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of sixteen match, before losing out to China's Jiang Huachen, who was able to score eight points in two straight periods, leaving Bouguerra without a single point.",
"score": "1.6338457"
},
{
"id": "14831664",
"title": "Issa Sarr",
"text": " Issa Sarr (born 9 October 1986) is a Senegalese professional footballer who currently plays for South African club Uthongathi.",
"score": "1.6260684"
},
{
"id": "26022586",
"title": "Behdad Sami",
"text": " Behdad started his professional career playing point guard for the Georgia Gwizzlies in the American Basketball Association (ABA) & also professionally overseas. Standing at six feet with only a 7-foot 4 vertical arm reach, his dunking vertical leap is measured at 46\" and has a 40-yard dash time of 4.469 seconds. In SAQ (speed, agility, quickness) tests done in December 2008, he managed to touch a 10-foot 9 inch mark on a concrete surfaced facility. Sami has played in many different countries and different leagues around the world including major-league professional teams in Iran and Qatar. Behdad started the 2010 season with the San Diego Surf (ABA) but within the first month of the season was signed to play with the Guifoes Sport Club in Portugal's ProLiga. Following his season in Portugal, Sami received results indicating he had played his season in Portugal on a broken shin. Due to this injury, he has been forced to sit out the entire 2011-2013 season, and undergo rigorous physical therapy.",
"score": "1.6209466"
},
{
"id": "27958429",
"title": "Samir Barać",
"text": " Samir Barać (born 2 November 1973 in Rijeka) is a Croatian water polo player who competed in the 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. As team captain, he was part of the Croatian team that won the gold medal in 2012. He played for VK Primorje Rijeka, POŠK Split, HAVK Mladost Zagreb and Brescia.",
"score": "1.6063529"
},
{
"id": "9280718",
"title": "Sami Meguetounif",
"text": " Meguetounif is currently studying in his final year of the Lycée, the equivalent to A-Levels in France. He lives and studies together with his F4 teammate Victor Bernier.",
"score": "1.6045164"
},
{
"id": "968884",
"title": "Samir (footballer, born 1994)",
"text": " Samir is a large, quick, and physically powerful left-footed defender, who is known for his confidence, solid distribution, ability to read the game, and strength in the air, which makes him a goal threat on set-pieces in the opposition's area. Although primarily a centre-back, he is also capable of playing as a left-back or as a defensive midfielder.",
"score": "1.6029353"
},
{
"id": "26694565",
"title": "Sami Tajeddine",
"text": " Sami Tajeddine (born 10 June 1982) is a Moroccan football player who,, was playing for Raja Casablanca. He was part of the Moroccan 2004 Olympic football team, who exited in the first round, finishing third in group D, behind group winners Iraq and runners-up Costa Rica.",
"score": "1.5993065"
},
{
"id": "3942858",
"title": "Bastir Samir",
"text": " Samir is the brother of bantamweight Issa Samir and is the team captain of Ghana's national team Black Bombers. He won the African Championships in the welterweight division in May 2007. At the All-African Games he knocked out Hosam Bakr Abdin, but lost the final bout to Rached Merdassi. He missed the world championships as he could not make the weight and had to jump two weight classes to light-heavyweight to qualify for the 2008 Summer Olympics because Ahmed Saraku was the established middleweight. He managed to achieve this in the second qualifier.",
"score": "1.5939598"
},
{
"id": "25467581",
"title": "Sami Lahssaini",
"text": " Sami Lahssaini (born 18 September 1998) is a Moroccan-Belgian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian First Division A club Seraing, on loan from Ligue 1 club Metz.",
"score": "1.5920053"
},
{
"id": "528936",
"title": "Sami Khedira",
"text": " Khedira was born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg. His father is Tunisian and his mother is German. Sami's younger brother Rani plays for FC Augsburg and has represented the German U19 team.",
"score": "1.588016"
},
{
"id": "1702967",
"title": "Samir Šarić",
"text": " Samir Šarić (born 27 May 1984 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football player.",
"score": "1.5854886"
},
{
"id": "528919",
"title": "Sami Khedira",
"text": " Sami Khedira (born 4 April 1987) is a German former professional footballer who played as a central midfielder. He began his career at VfB Stuttgart, winning the Bundesliga in 2007, before moving to Real Madrid in 2010. In his five seasons in Spain, he won seven domestic and international trophies, including the UEFA Champions League in 2014. In 2015, he moved to Italian side Juventus on a free transfer, and won the Serie A title and Coppa Italia in his first three seasons with the club, followed by two more league titles and a Supercoppa Italiana. A full international for Germany since 2009, Khedira earned 77 caps for the national team. He has taken part at three FIFA World Cups and two UEFA European Championships with Germany, and was part of their squads which reached the semi-finals at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 2012 and 2016 UEFA European Football Championships; he also won the 2014 FIFA World Cup.",
"score": "1.5831726"
},
{
"id": "25072038",
"title": "Olivier Sarr",
"text": " Sarr played for France at the 2016 FIBA Under-17 World Championship in Zaragoza, Spain. He averaged 4.4 points and four rebounds per game and helped his team finish in sixth place. At the 2017 FIBA U18 European Championship in Slovakia, Sarr averaged 7.6 points and 5.4 rebounds per game for the sixth-place team.",
"score": "1.5824409"
},
{
"id": "2651813",
"title": "Sami El Gueddari",
"text": " Sami El Gueddari (born 1 February 1984 in Orléans) is a French wheelchair racer and competitive swimmer who participated in the Paralympic Games of 2008 and 2012. He was a bronze medalist at the European Championships in 2009. He is a specialist of 50 meter and 100 meter freestyle.",
"score": "1.5807407"
},
{
"id": "5395613",
"title": "Samir Ayass",
"text": " Samir Ayass was born in Sofia, Bulgaria to a Lebanese father and a Bulgarian mother. He started his playing career at CSKA Sofia at the age of six.",
"score": "1.5806403"
},
{
"id": "6715686",
"title": "Abderahman Samir",
"text": " He plays at the Mesaimeer since 2010.",
"score": "1.5743159"
}
] | [
"Samir Sarsare\n Samir Sarsare is a Moroccan footballer. He usually plays as forward. Sarsare is currently attached to Moghreb Tétouan.",
"Samir Nasri\n While growing up in La Gavotte Peyret, Nasri regularly played the sport on the streets where he learned many of his skills. Upon noticing his prodigious talent, his parents signed him up to play with the local club in his hometown. Nasri spent one year playing with the club in La Gavotte Peyret before moving to Pennes Mirabeau in nearby Mirabeau at age seven. While playing with Pennes, Nasri was discovered by Marseille scout Freddy Assolen, who had been informed of the player's talent through local word of mouth. After noticing Nasri's skill in person, Assolen recruited the player to travel with a group of other young players to Italy to participate in a youth tournament where they would play against the youth academies of Milan and Juventus. Nasri impressed at the tournament and Assolen was jokingly told by a Milan scout that \"he [Nasri] stays here, you leave him\". After returning to France, Marseille officials organized a meeting with the player's father and the group agreed to allow Nasri insertion into the club's academy at the age of nine.",
"Sami El Choum\n Sami Ali El Choum (سامي علي الشوم; born 22 June 1982) is a Lebanese football coach and former player who is the head coach of club AC Sporting. A defensive midfielder for Lebanese Premier League side Ansar, El Choum remained at the Beirut-based club for over 10 years, winning multiple titles. He played for Homenetmen in the Lebanese Second Division for one year. El Choum represented the Lebanon national team in 2003. Between 2017 and 2018 El Choum coached Ansar, winning the 2016–17 Lebanese FA Cup, before becoming coach of Lebanese Third Division side AC Sporting in 2018, leading them to back-to-back promotions to the Lebanese Premier League.",
"Olivier Sarr\n Sarr started playing basketball at age three with his father, a former player, and drew inspiration from Hakeem Olajuwon. He played for club teams Bouscat and TOAC before joining INSEP, a sports institute in Paris. He competed for Centre Fédéral in the Nationale Masculine 1 and represented INSEP at the Adidas Next Generation Tournament. Sarr moved to the United States when he was 15 years old. He was considered a four-star recruit by Scout and committed to Wake Forest over offers from California, Vanderbilt and UCF.",
"Samir Bouguerra\n Samir Bouguerra (سمير بوقرة; born July 18, 1982) is an amateur Algerian Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's heavyweight category. He won a silver medal for his division at the 2007 All-Africa Games in Algiers, losing out to Egyptian wrestler and defending Olympic champion Karam Gaber. Bouguerra represented Algeria at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed for the men's 96 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of sixteen match, before losing out to China's Jiang Huachen, who was able to score eight points in two straight periods, leaving Bouguerra without a single point.",
"Issa Sarr\n Issa Sarr (born 9 October 1986) is a Senegalese professional footballer who currently plays for South African club Uthongathi.",
"Behdad Sami\n Behdad started his professional career playing point guard for the Georgia Gwizzlies in the American Basketball Association (ABA) & also professionally overseas. Standing at six feet with only a 7-foot 4 vertical arm reach, his dunking vertical leap is measured at 46\" and has a 40-yard dash time of 4.469 seconds. In SAQ (speed, agility, quickness) tests done in December 2008, he managed to touch a 10-foot 9 inch mark on a concrete surfaced facility. Sami has played in many different countries and different leagues around the world including major-league professional teams in Iran and Qatar. Behdad started the 2010 season with the San Diego Surf (ABA) but within the first month of the season was signed to play with the Guifoes Sport Club in Portugal's ProLiga. Following his season in Portugal, Sami received results indicating he had played his season in Portugal on a broken shin. Due to this injury, he has been forced to sit out the entire 2011-2013 season, and undergo rigorous physical therapy.",
"Samir Barać\n Samir Barać (born 2 November 1973 in Rijeka) is a Croatian water polo player who competed in the 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. As team captain, he was part of the Croatian team that won the gold medal in 2012. He played for VK Primorje Rijeka, POŠK Split, HAVK Mladost Zagreb and Brescia.",
"Sami Meguetounif\n Meguetounif is currently studying in his final year of the Lycée, the equivalent to A-Levels in France. He lives and studies together with his F4 teammate Victor Bernier.",
"Samir (footballer, born 1994)\n Samir is a large, quick, and physically powerful left-footed defender, who is known for his confidence, solid distribution, ability to read the game, and strength in the air, which makes him a goal threat on set-pieces in the opposition's area. Although primarily a centre-back, he is also capable of playing as a left-back or as a defensive midfielder.",
"Sami Tajeddine\n Sami Tajeddine (born 10 June 1982) is a Moroccan football player who,, was playing for Raja Casablanca. He was part of the Moroccan 2004 Olympic football team, who exited in the first round, finishing third in group D, behind group winners Iraq and runners-up Costa Rica.",
"Bastir Samir\n Samir is the brother of bantamweight Issa Samir and is the team captain of Ghana's national team Black Bombers. He won the African Championships in the welterweight division in May 2007. At the All-African Games he knocked out Hosam Bakr Abdin, but lost the final bout to Rached Merdassi. He missed the world championships as he could not make the weight and had to jump two weight classes to light-heavyweight to qualify for the 2008 Summer Olympics because Ahmed Saraku was the established middleweight. He managed to achieve this in the second qualifier.",
"Sami Lahssaini\n Sami Lahssaini (born 18 September 1998) is a Moroccan-Belgian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian First Division A club Seraing, on loan from Ligue 1 club Metz.",
"Sami Khedira\n Khedira was born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg. His father is Tunisian and his mother is German. Sami's younger brother Rani plays for FC Augsburg and has represented the German U19 team.",
"Samir Šarić\n Samir Šarić (born 27 May 1984 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football player.",
"Sami Khedira\n Sami Khedira (born 4 April 1987) is a German former professional footballer who played as a central midfielder. He began his career at VfB Stuttgart, winning the Bundesliga in 2007, before moving to Real Madrid in 2010. In his five seasons in Spain, he won seven domestic and international trophies, including the UEFA Champions League in 2014. In 2015, he moved to Italian side Juventus on a free transfer, and won the Serie A title and Coppa Italia in his first three seasons with the club, followed by two more league titles and a Supercoppa Italiana. A full international for Germany since 2009, Khedira earned 77 caps for the national team. He has taken part at three FIFA World Cups and two UEFA European Championships with Germany, and was part of their squads which reached the semi-finals at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 2012 and 2016 UEFA European Football Championships; he also won the 2014 FIFA World Cup.",
"Olivier Sarr\n Sarr played for France at the 2016 FIBA Under-17 World Championship in Zaragoza, Spain. He averaged 4.4 points and four rebounds per game and helped his team finish in sixth place. At the 2017 FIBA U18 European Championship in Slovakia, Sarr averaged 7.6 points and 5.4 rebounds per game for the sixth-place team.",
"Sami El Gueddari\n Sami El Gueddari (born 1 February 1984 in Orléans) is a French wheelchair racer and competitive swimmer who participated in the Paralympic Games of 2008 and 2012. He was a bronze medalist at the European Championships in 2009. He is a specialist of 50 meter and 100 meter freestyle.",
"Samir Ayass\n Samir Ayass was born in Sofia, Bulgaria to a Lebanese father and a Bulgarian mother. He started his playing career at CSKA Sofia at the age of six.",
"Abderahman Samir\n He plays at the Mesaimeer since 2010."
] |
What sport does Turkish Seniors Open play? | [
"golf",
"Golf"
] | sport | Turkish Seniors Open | 6,045,815 | 82 | [
{
"id": "3471492",
"title": "Tunisian Seniors Open",
"text": " The Tunisian Seniors Open was a senior (over 50s) men's professional match play golf tournament played on the European Seniors Tour. It was played in late 1992 and then from 2001 to 2003. It was held at Port El Kantaoui Golf Club, Port El Kantaoui, Tunisia which had previously hosted the Tunisian Open from 1982 to 1985.",
"score": "1.5217746"
},
{
"id": "12924418",
"title": "Swiss Seniors Open",
"text": " The Swiss Seniors Open is the Swiss stop on men's professional golf's European Senior Tour. It was founded in 1997 as the Credit Suisse Private Banking Seniors Open and from 1999 to 2014 was known as the Bad Ragaz PGA Seniors Open. It is played at Bad Ragaz Golf Club. In 2019 the prize fund was €320,000.",
"score": "1.490185"
},
{
"id": "8409958",
"title": "Underwater hockey in Turkey",
"text": " Underwater hockey in Turkey is governed by the Turkish Underwater Sports Federation (Türkiye Sualtı Sporları Federasyonu, TSSF). The TSSF organizes annual Turkey Cups for masters, under-24, and under-19 men's and women's clubs. National teams of men and women masters, U24 and U19 take part at international competitions.",
"score": "1.4822752"
},
{
"id": "15547587",
"title": "Curling in Turkey",
"text": " The country competed in its first event at the 2010 European Mixed Curling Championship, where they placed 23rd of 24 teams. They won one game, against the Netherlands. Turkey's first participation in juniors category was in the 2013 European Junior Curling Challenge in Prague, Czech Republic, a qualification tournament for the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships. Turkish national wheelchair curling team, which consisted of curlers all from İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi S.K., made its debut in November 2012 at the 2013 World Wheelchair Curling Championship – Qualification Event in Lohja, Finland.",
"score": "1.4731596"
},
{
"id": "4921267",
"title": "Greek Seniors Open",
"text": " The Greek Seniors Open was an over-50s men's professional golf tournament on the European Seniors Tour that was played at Glyfada Golf Club of Athens, Glifada in Athens from 1999 to 2001. The 2001 event was won by Russell Weir, his only win on the Seniors Tour.",
"score": "1.4721644"
},
{
"id": "8148954",
"title": "Video games in Turkey",
"text": " Turkey has a presence in the professional e-sports market, especially in League of Legends and other games created by Riot Games. E-Sport team found that the market for more than ten professionals from more than four thousand in Turkey are also licensed e-athletes. Beşiktaş and traditional sports clubs also stepped in, and other sports clubs, especially Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe, joined the e-Sports market. The Turkey Digital Games Federation was established in 2011 and later superseded by the e-Sports Federation of Turkey on April 24, 2018.",
"score": "1.4717698"
},
{
"id": "25188145",
"title": "Senior Italian Open",
"text": " The Senior Italian Open is a men's professional golf tournament for players aged 50 and above which is part of the European Senior Tour schedule. It was played from 2004 to 2008 and then restarted in 2016. The tournament was originally played at GC Venezia, near Venice, but has since been played at GC Arzaga on Lake Garda and GC Udine, Fagagna. Italy's most successful 20th century male golfer, Costantino Rocca, made his senior debut at the 2007 edition of his home senior open.",
"score": "1.4696894"
},
{
"id": "26243786",
"title": "Scandinavian Seniors Open",
"text": " The Scandinavian Senior Open was a men's professional golf tournament for players aged 50 and above as part of the European Seniors Tour. It was played in Denmark from 2005 to 2007. The 2005 and 2006 events were held at Royal Copenhagen Golf Club, Kongens Lyngby, while the 2006 tournament was played at Helsingør Golf Club, Helsingør. The prize fund was €250,000.",
"score": "1.4654005"
},
{
"id": "13289982",
"title": "Turkey",
"text": " 2017–18 CEV Women's Champions League for the fourth time in their history. The traditional national sport of Turkey has been yağlı güreş (oil wrestling) since Ottoman times. Edirne Province has hosted the annual Kırkpınar oil wrestling tournament since 1361, making it the oldest continuously held sporting competition in the world. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Ottoman Turkish oil wrestling champions such as Koca Yusuf, Nurullah Hasan and Kızılcıklı Mahmut acquired international fame in Europe and North America by winning world heavyweight wrestling championship titles. International wrestling styles governed by FILA such as freestyle wrestling and Greco-Roman wrestling are also popular, with many European, World and Olympic championship titles won by Turkish wrestlers both individually and as a national team.",
"score": "1.4646418"
},
{
"id": "27671153",
"title": "Jereed",
"text": " sticks prompted Mahmud II (1808–1839) in 1826 to ban the sport after he dissolved the Janissary Corps. Although playing jereed resumed before long, particularly in the provinces, it never recovered the importance of former times. Today, jereed is not as widespread as it once was, but is still enjoyed as a spectator sport, primarily in Erzurum and Bayburt, but also in the eastern provinces of Artvin, Erzincan, Kars, in the western provinces of Uşak, Balıkesir, Söğüt, in the southeastern provinces of Diyarbakır, Siirt and in the Central Anatolian province of Konya. Cultural folkloric societies are also attempting to keep this traditional sport alive by organizing local tournaments. Around 50 clubs in nine provinces in Turkey organize jereed tournaments.",
"score": "1.4568062"
},
{
"id": "6415082",
"title": "Turhan Göker",
"text": " Fenerbahce Sports upgraded Goker into the seniors’ team. Göker then became the champion of 800-meters nationals for seniors by 1’59’’2’’’. Göker’s continued being involved with athletics, including being a member of the Fenerbahce Sports Athletics and National Athletics Federation and executive member to the statistical administration branch of the National Athletics Federation. In 1966, he was offered membership in A.T.F.S., The International Athletics Annual. He also contributed as a council member in the National Olympics Committee, the Fair Play Commission, the Turkey Sports Foundation, the Olympian Guild, the Fenerbahce Sports Club, the Hilal (Crescent) Sports Club and the Marmara Sailing Club.",
"score": "1.455768"
},
{
"id": "14284775",
"title": "Klassis Turkish Open",
"text": " The Klassis Turkish Open was a golf tournament on the Challenge Tour, held in Turkey. First played in 1997 when Bradley Dredge triumphed over Magnus Persson Atlevi, it was discontinued after the 1998 edition. The Challenge Tour returned to Turkey in 2010 for the Turkish Challenge.",
"score": "1.4532762"
},
{
"id": "926932",
"title": "Gaziantep Polis Gücü SK",
"text": " field hockey, football, karate, taekwondo and judo for around 250 children from low-income families. The club's football side plays in the amateur league while the hockey team is successful in the Turkish Field and Indoor Hockey Super Leagues. The hockey team achieved a third place in 2008 at the Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge IV. In May 2013, the hockey team won the 2013 Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge III in Slovakia and was promoted to one higher division for the next year's competition. 34 players of the hockey team, which has ten Turkish champion titles sofar, were admitted to the Turkey national teams. Two of the shooting sport squad are Turkish champions in air pistol event, and three sportsmen compete in the national team.",
"score": "1.4443802"
},
{
"id": "25974354",
"title": "Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior)",
"text": " The Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior) is a men's golf tournament on the European Senior Tour. It was first held in 2008, as the Russian Seniors Open, at the Pestovo Golf and Yacht Club, near the Moscow Canal, north of Moscow, Russia. In 2013, after a four-year gap, it moved to Moscow Country Club, Nakhabino, north-west of Moscow. It was played in 2013 and 2014 and then revived in 2018.",
"score": "1.4420213"
},
{
"id": "11363072",
"title": "Turkish Blind Sports Federation",
"text": "athletics, ; chess, ; futsal B1 and B2/B3, ; goalball women's and men's leagues, ; judo, ; cycling, ; powerlifting as well as ; swimming women's and men's short and long course. The Turkish Blind Sports Federation (Türkiye Görme Engelliler Spor Federasyonu, GESF) is the governing body to encourage and develop the sport for the blind and vision-impaired in Turkey. It is a member of the International Blind Sports Association (IBSA) and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC). In 1990, the Turkish Disabled Sports Federation was formed, and the Blind Sport Federation was created as part of this organization in Ankara. On March 7, 2000, the Blind Sport Federation separated as an independent organization. In accordance with the developments on blind sport in Europe, the Federation was officially established on July 12, 2000. Sports promoted by the federation are:",
"score": "1.4400821"
},
{
"id": "7211381",
"title": "Hidde Turkstra",
"text": " Turkstra started playing hockey at Rotterdam and in 2005 he switched to Victoria. Where he made his debut in the senior team. In 2009 he returned to Rotterdam, where he played for ten seasons until he retired in 2019.",
"score": "1.4368637"
},
{
"id": "25353461",
"title": "Spanish Senior Open",
"text": " The Spanish Senior Open was a golf tournament on the over fifties men's professional European Seniors Tour. It was first played in 1994, which was the tour's third season, at La Manga Club in Murcia but was cancelled after one year. The tournament was revived in 2005 and played at the Club de Campo del Mediterráneo near Castellón de la Plana, Castellón, Spain. In 2007 the prize fund was €325,000. In 2008 the Seniors Tour Championship moved to Club de Campo del Mediterráneo and was called the \"OKI Castellón Open España - Senior Tour Championship\".",
"score": "1.4339381"
},
{
"id": "27945803",
"title": "Turkish Billiards Federation",
"text": "Three-cushion billiards ; Turkish Three-cushion Championship ; Turkish Three-cushion First League ; Turkish Three-cushion Teams Championship ; Turkish Women\"s Three-cushion Championship ; Turkish Youth Three-cushion Championship Pool ; Turkish Pool Championship ; Inter University Pool Tournament Artistic billiards ; Turkish Artistic billiards Championship Turkish Billiards Federation (Türkiye Bilardo Federasyonu, TBF) is the governing body of the cue sports in Turkey. Founded on December 2, 2006, it is based in Ankara. The Turkish organization is member of the Confédération Européenne de Billard (CEB) and the Union Mondiale de Billard (UMB). Since May 2014, the TBF is chaired by Ersan Ercan. The Turkish Billiard Federation organizes cue sports competitions at national, European and World level. National level official competitions are: ",
"score": "1.433904"
},
{
"id": "32627225",
"title": "Turkey Open",
"text": " The Turkey Open originally known as the Turkey International Championships also known as the Istanbul International Championships is a defunct tennis tournament that was played on outdoor Clay courts, Istanbul, Turkey. The event was part of the Mens amateur tennis tour (1947-1967) with the advent of the Open Era it was part of the non-aligned tour circuit of the ITF, between 1968 and 1973. In 1975 the final year it was staged it became part of the Grand Prix tennis circuit.",
"score": "1.425843"
},
{
"id": "27817669",
"title": "İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi GSK",
"text": " undefined İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyespor (İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi Spor Kulübü) is a multi-sports club established 1979 in İzmir, Turkey by the city's metropolitan municipality (İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi). The club's colors are blue and white. İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyespor is active in a total of 21 branches, including Paralympic and many Olympic sports. The men's handball team of the club plays in the Turkish Handball Super League, the women's team in the Turkish Women's Handball Super League and the wheelchair basketball team in the Turkish Wheelchair Basketball Super League successfully.",
"score": "1.4247844"
}
] | [
"Tunisian Seniors Open\n The Tunisian Seniors Open was a senior (over 50s) men's professional match play golf tournament played on the European Seniors Tour. It was played in late 1992 and then from 2001 to 2003. It was held at Port El Kantaoui Golf Club, Port El Kantaoui, Tunisia which had previously hosted the Tunisian Open from 1982 to 1985.",
"Swiss Seniors Open\n The Swiss Seniors Open is the Swiss stop on men's professional golf's European Senior Tour. It was founded in 1997 as the Credit Suisse Private Banking Seniors Open and from 1999 to 2014 was known as the Bad Ragaz PGA Seniors Open. It is played at Bad Ragaz Golf Club. In 2019 the prize fund was €320,000.",
"Underwater hockey in Turkey\n Underwater hockey in Turkey is governed by the Turkish Underwater Sports Federation (Türkiye Sualtı Sporları Federasyonu, TSSF). The TSSF organizes annual Turkey Cups for masters, under-24, and under-19 men's and women's clubs. National teams of men and women masters, U24 and U19 take part at international competitions.",
"Curling in Turkey\n The country competed in its first event at the 2010 European Mixed Curling Championship, where they placed 23rd of 24 teams. They won one game, against the Netherlands. Turkey's first participation in juniors category was in the 2013 European Junior Curling Challenge in Prague, Czech Republic, a qualification tournament for the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships. Turkish national wheelchair curling team, which consisted of curlers all from İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi S.K., made its debut in November 2012 at the 2013 World Wheelchair Curling Championship – Qualification Event in Lohja, Finland.",
"Greek Seniors Open\n The Greek Seniors Open was an over-50s men's professional golf tournament on the European Seniors Tour that was played at Glyfada Golf Club of Athens, Glifada in Athens from 1999 to 2001. The 2001 event was won by Russell Weir, his only win on the Seniors Tour.",
"Video games in Turkey\n Turkey has a presence in the professional e-sports market, especially in League of Legends and other games created by Riot Games. E-Sport team found that the market for more than ten professionals from more than four thousand in Turkey are also licensed e-athletes. Beşiktaş and traditional sports clubs also stepped in, and other sports clubs, especially Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe, joined the e-Sports market. The Turkey Digital Games Federation was established in 2011 and later superseded by the e-Sports Federation of Turkey on April 24, 2018.",
"Senior Italian Open\n The Senior Italian Open is a men's professional golf tournament for players aged 50 and above which is part of the European Senior Tour schedule. It was played from 2004 to 2008 and then restarted in 2016. The tournament was originally played at GC Venezia, near Venice, but has since been played at GC Arzaga on Lake Garda and GC Udine, Fagagna. Italy's most successful 20th century male golfer, Costantino Rocca, made his senior debut at the 2007 edition of his home senior open.",
"Scandinavian Seniors Open\n The Scandinavian Senior Open was a men's professional golf tournament for players aged 50 and above as part of the European Seniors Tour. It was played in Denmark from 2005 to 2007. The 2005 and 2006 events were held at Royal Copenhagen Golf Club, Kongens Lyngby, while the 2006 tournament was played at Helsingør Golf Club, Helsingør. The prize fund was €250,000.",
"Turkey\n 2017–18 CEV Women's Champions League for the fourth time in their history. The traditional national sport of Turkey has been yağlı güreş (oil wrestling) since Ottoman times. Edirne Province has hosted the annual Kırkpınar oil wrestling tournament since 1361, making it the oldest continuously held sporting competition in the world. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Ottoman Turkish oil wrestling champions such as Koca Yusuf, Nurullah Hasan and Kızılcıklı Mahmut acquired international fame in Europe and North America by winning world heavyweight wrestling championship titles. International wrestling styles governed by FILA such as freestyle wrestling and Greco-Roman wrestling are also popular, with many European, World and Olympic championship titles won by Turkish wrestlers both individually and as a national team.",
"Jereed\n sticks prompted Mahmud II (1808–1839) in 1826 to ban the sport after he dissolved the Janissary Corps. Although playing jereed resumed before long, particularly in the provinces, it never recovered the importance of former times. Today, jereed is not as widespread as it once was, but is still enjoyed as a spectator sport, primarily in Erzurum and Bayburt, but also in the eastern provinces of Artvin, Erzincan, Kars, in the western provinces of Uşak, Balıkesir, Söğüt, in the southeastern provinces of Diyarbakır, Siirt and in the Central Anatolian province of Konya. Cultural folkloric societies are also attempting to keep this traditional sport alive by organizing local tournaments. Around 50 clubs in nine provinces in Turkey organize jereed tournaments.",
"Turhan Göker\n Fenerbahce Sports upgraded Goker into the seniors’ team. Göker then became the champion of 800-meters nationals for seniors by 1’59’’2’’’. Göker’s continued being involved with athletics, including being a member of the Fenerbahce Sports Athletics and National Athletics Federation and executive member to the statistical administration branch of the National Athletics Federation. In 1966, he was offered membership in A.T.F.S., The International Athletics Annual. He also contributed as a council member in the National Olympics Committee, the Fair Play Commission, the Turkey Sports Foundation, the Olympian Guild, the Fenerbahce Sports Club, the Hilal (Crescent) Sports Club and the Marmara Sailing Club.",
"Klassis Turkish Open\n The Klassis Turkish Open was a golf tournament on the Challenge Tour, held in Turkey. First played in 1997 when Bradley Dredge triumphed over Magnus Persson Atlevi, it was discontinued after the 1998 edition. The Challenge Tour returned to Turkey in 2010 for the Turkish Challenge.",
"Gaziantep Polis Gücü SK\n field hockey, football, karate, taekwondo and judo for around 250 children from low-income families. The club's football side plays in the amateur league while the hockey team is successful in the Turkish Field and Indoor Hockey Super Leagues. The hockey team achieved a third place in 2008 at the Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge IV. In May 2013, the hockey team won the 2013 Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge III in Slovakia and was promoted to one higher division for the next year's competition. 34 players of the hockey team, which has ten Turkish champion titles sofar, were admitted to the Turkey national teams. Two of the shooting sport squad are Turkish champions in air pistol event, and three sportsmen compete in the national team.",
"Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior)\n The Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior) is a men's golf tournament on the European Senior Tour. It was first held in 2008, as the Russian Seniors Open, at the Pestovo Golf and Yacht Club, near the Moscow Canal, north of Moscow, Russia. In 2013, after a four-year gap, it moved to Moscow Country Club, Nakhabino, north-west of Moscow. It was played in 2013 and 2014 and then revived in 2018.",
"Turkish Blind Sports Federation\nathletics, ; chess, ; futsal B1 and B2/B3, ; goalball women's and men's leagues, ; judo, ; cycling, ; powerlifting as well as ; swimming women's and men's short and long course. The Turkish Blind Sports Federation (Türkiye Görme Engelliler Spor Federasyonu, GESF) is the governing body to encourage and develop the sport for the blind and vision-impaired in Turkey. It is a member of the International Blind Sports Association (IBSA) and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC). In 1990, the Turkish Disabled Sports Federation was formed, and the Blind Sport Federation was created as part of this organization in Ankara. On March 7, 2000, the Blind Sport Federation separated as an independent organization. In accordance with the developments on blind sport in Europe, the Federation was officially established on July 12, 2000. Sports promoted by the federation are:",
"Hidde Turkstra\n Turkstra started playing hockey at Rotterdam and in 2005 he switched to Victoria. Where he made his debut in the senior team. In 2009 he returned to Rotterdam, where he played for ten seasons until he retired in 2019.",
"Spanish Senior Open\n The Spanish Senior Open was a golf tournament on the over fifties men's professional European Seniors Tour. It was first played in 1994, which was the tour's third season, at La Manga Club in Murcia but was cancelled after one year. The tournament was revived in 2005 and played at the Club de Campo del Mediterráneo near Castellón de la Plana, Castellón, Spain. In 2007 the prize fund was €325,000. In 2008 the Seniors Tour Championship moved to Club de Campo del Mediterráneo and was called the \"OKI Castellón Open España - Senior Tour Championship\".",
"Turkish Billiards Federation\nThree-cushion billiards ; Turkish Three-cushion Championship ; Turkish Three-cushion First League ; Turkish Three-cushion Teams Championship ; Turkish Women\"s Three-cushion Championship ; Turkish Youth Three-cushion Championship Pool ; Turkish Pool Championship ; Inter University Pool Tournament Artistic billiards ; Turkish Artistic billiards Championship Turkish Billiards Federation (Türkiye Bilardo Federasyonu, TBF) is the governing body of the cue sports in Turkey. Founded on December 2, 2006, it is based in Ankara. The Turkish organization is member of the Confédération Européenne de Billard (CEB) and the Union Mondiale de Billard (UMB). Since May 2014, the TBF is chaired by Ersan Ercan. The Turkish Billiard Federation organizes cue sports competitions at national, European and World level. National level official competitions are: ",
"Turkey Open\n The Turkey Open originally known as the Turkey International Championships also known as the Istanbul International Championships is a defunct tennis tournament that was played on outdoor Clay courts, Istanbul, Turkey. The event was part of the Mens amateur tennis tour (1947-1967) with the advent of the Open Era it was part of the non-aligned tour circuit of the ITF, between 1968 and 1973. In 1975 the final year it was staged it became part of the Grand Prix tennis circuit.",
"İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi GSK\n undefined İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyespor (İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi Spor Kulübü) is a multi-sports club established 1979 in İzmir, Turkey by the city's metropolitan municipality (İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyesi). The club's colors are blue and white. İzmir Büyükşehir Belediyespor is active in a total of 21 branches, including Paralympic and many Olympic sports. The men's handball team of the club plays in the Turkish Handball Super League, the women's team in the Turkish Women's Handball Super League and the wheelchair basketball team in the Turkish Wheelchair Basketball Super League successfully."
] |
What sport does Njurunda SK play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Njurunda SK | 1,568,692 | 49 | [
{
"id": "31373436",
"title": "Njurunda SK",
"text": " Njurunda SK is an ice hockey team in Njurunda, Sweden. They play in the Swedish Division 2, the fourth level of ice hockey in Sweden. Their home arena is the Njurunda ishall, which opened in 1986. Henrik Zetterberg used to play for the club's youth team. Njurunda had previously played in the third-level Division 1, but elected to drop out of the league during the 2012-13 season, following the conclusion of the Division 1B continuation series.",
"score": "2.109472"
},
{
"id": "27244207",
"title": "Nakuru AllStars",
"text": " the club. Vendelboe was part of a consortium which purchased the football club AC Nakuru, and included and merged it with the rest of the Nakuru AllStars club. Among the members of the new technical staff was Sammy Nyongesa who was a player with the original team in 1969 when it last won the league. He has also previously coached the Kenya national football team and is known in Nakuru for running the Youth Olympic centre that produced such as players as Ambrose Ayoyi and John Muiruri In 2011, the Nakuru AllStars played in the FKL Nationwide League. When the new owners came in the former team had amassed 9 points from 12 matches and were firmly in the relegation spot but by the end of the season the team ",
"score": "1.5380955"
},
{
"id": "26438289",
"title": "Njurunda",
"text": "Fredrik Modin – Hockey player ; Henrik Zetterberg – Hockey player ; Lars Dahlqvist – Skier ; Fredrik Wikingsson – Journalist ; Sebastian Lauritzen – Hockey player ; Mathias Månsson – Hockey player ",
"score": "1.5259724"
},
{
"id": "1219775",
"title": "Skuru IK (women's handball)",
"text": " Skuru IK Handboll is a women's handball team based in Nacka, Sweden, that competes in the SHE Women. They play their home matches in Nacka Bollhall, which have capacity for 460 spectators. They play in green shirts and green shorts.",
"score": "1.4988775"
},
{
"id": "30205504",
"title": "Kenneth Nkweta Nju",
"text": " Nju played for General Caballero ZC.",
"score": "1.4912777"
},
{
"id": "3421330",
"title": "JKU S.C.",
"text": " Jeshi la Kujenga Uchumi Sports Club, or simply JKU SC is a football club from Zanzibar. The team won the Nyerere Cup in 1974.",
"score": "1.4798765"
},
{
"id": "28675378",
"title": "Nakuru Athletic Club",
"text": " Nakuru Athletic Club is a sports club located in Nakuru capital of Rift Valley Province, Kenya. The club also has a cricket team playing in the Rift Valley cricket league. The club ground has hosted many High profile cricket games including a game featuring Rift Valley Cricket Association XI v Minor Counties of England. The Nakuru Athletic Club is also home ground for Nakuru RFC, a local rugby union team. Nakuru Athletic club has also a field hockey team playing in the National League. Nakuru's football team, Nakuru AllStars, who play in the Nationwide Division, has their training sessions at Nakuru Athletic Ground. FG Soccer Academy - Nakuru's premier soccer academy, a non for profit soccer school that combines football, character development and education also uses Nakuru Athletic Ground as their training complex Under the colonial rule, indigenous Kenyan were barred from Nakuru Athletic Club. Thus they were using the “African Sports Stadium,” now known as Afraha Stadium.",
"score": "1.4647329"
},
{
"id": "9113026",
"title": "Geoffrey Sserunkuma",
"text": " He first began playing for the Cranes in the year 2002. He was part of the Uganda Cranes team that participated in the 2016 Championship of Africa Nations tournament in Rwanda and scored against Zimbabwe in their 1-1 draw. Sserunkuma was one of the six locally based players in the Cranes squad which represented Uganda in 2017 Africa Cup of Nations at Gabon.",
"score": "1.4537103"
},
{
"id": "7449342",
"title": "Jamila Lunkuse",
"text": "2013 - Rwenzori Uganda Sports Press Association Sportsman of the Month (April) ",
"score": "1.437933"
},
{
"id": "12686670",
"title": "SC Villa",
"text": " Sports Club Villa is an association football club based in Uganda. They play their home games at the Mandela National Stadium in Wakiso District.",
"score": "1.4331151"
},
{
"id": "90345",
"title": "SK Njård",
"text": " SK Njård is a Norwegian multi-sports club from Vestre Aker, Oslo. It is named after Njörðr in Norse mythology. Founded in 1924, it has sections for alpine skiing, fencing, team handball, cross-country skiing, tennis, gymnastics, and rhythmic gymnastics, orienteering together with IL Heming (as Heming/Njård), and has also had sections for bandy and basketball. Its arena Njårdhallen is used for indoor sports. Its women's handball team plays in the second highest Norwegian league. Their most famous player was goalkeeper Jeanette Nilsen. Skiers in Njård include Celine Brun-Lie. Also, 2008 Olympic fencer Sturla Torkildsen represents the club.",
"score": "1.4296334"
},
{
"id": "5602011",
"title": "Sport in Sri Lanka",
"text": " Games such as Kotta Pora (Pillow fight), Ankeliya (tugging the horn), Kana mutti bindeema (breaking pots), Porapol Gaseema, Lissana gaha nageema (climbing the greasy pole),Banis Kaema (bun eating contest) and Gudu Keliya are played during the Avurudu times.",
"score": "1.4266018"
},
{
"id": "28218992",
"title": "Ronald Ketjijere",
"text": " Ronald Himeekua Ketjijere (born December 12, 1987) is a Namibian football holding midfielder who plays for the Namibia national football team. He is the current captain of the Brave Warriors and can also play as an offensive midfielder. He previously played for Katutura giant African Stars in the Namibia Premier League, having joined the team in 2009 from UNAM.",
"score": "1.4194629"
},
{
"id": "30209111",
"title": "Jean Sseninde",
"text": " Following her graduation from Kitende, Sseninde sought counsel from Majida Nantanda, the head coach of the Uganda women's national soccer team. Nantanda recommended that Jean should join a professional football club in England, through the Federation of Uganda Football Associations (FUFA). Prior to joining the London Phoenix Ladies FC, Jean played for the Charlton Athletic Women's Football Club, for one season. Before that, she played for the Queens Park Rangers Ladies Football Club (QPRLFC), for three seasons.",
"score": "1.4186232"
},
{
"id": "29521268",
"title": "Mombasa Sports Club",
"text": " Other disciplines at Mombasa Sports Club include Basketball, Squash, Snooker, Tennis, Bowling and Bridge.",
"score": "1.4090881"
},
{
"id": "32461509",
"title": "Sport in Kenya",
"text": " Field hockey is also played in Kenya. The Kenya men's national field hockey team had its best Hockey World Cup result in 1971, when it finished fourth. The team also participated in the Summer Olympics seven times, finishing 6th in 1964. The home venue of the team is the City Park Hockey Stadium in Nairobi. The hockey sport in Kenya is overseen by the Kenya Hockey Union (KHU).",
"score": "1.4080923"
},
{
"id": "27458662",
"title": "Njala Quan Sports Academy",
"text": " Njalla Quan Sports Academy, or NQSA, is a football club in Cameroon. The academy was founded by Mr. Henry Njalla Quan on 15 September 2000. They currently play in the top-flight football league of Cameroon ( MTN Elite One ). Stade Municipal de Limbé is their home stadium, with a capacity of 12,000.",
"score": "1.4064157"
},
{
"id": "14639711",
"title": "Christophe Nduwarugira",
"text": " Nduwarugira was invited by Lofty Naseem, the national team coach, to represent Burundi in the 2014 African Nations Championship held in South Africa.",
"score": "1.4032545"
},
{
"id": "15774356",
"title": "Ivan Ntege",
"text": " In January 2014, coach Milutin Sredojević, invited him to be a part of the Uganda national football team squad for the 2014 African Nations Championship. The team placed third in the group stage of the competition after beating Burkina Faso, drawing with Zimbabwe and losing to Morocco.",
"score": "1.400893"
},
{
"id": "26438288",
"title": "Njurunda",
"text": " Njurunda is a small village in Sundsvall Municipality, located in Västernorrland County, Sweden. The village is situated at the mouth of the Ljungan river and located about 17 kilometers south of Sundsvall. It is primarily a sleeper town for Sundsvall, with a residential population of about 5,000 households and about 450 small to medium-sized businesses. The elementary school is Kyrkmons skola, which has about 339 students, most of whom head on to Kvissleby and Nivrenaskolan for their 7th - 9th grades before they finally move on to the secondary schools in Sundsvall. The town was the seat of the former Nivren rural municipality, which later was swallowed by Sundsvall municipality in the consolidation process during the 1960s. Historically, there have been people living in Njurunda since the 5th century. The population, however, did not grow significantly until the 14th century, but late that century the Black Death halted this growth. Industrialization began around 1830 when several saw mills were established close to the Ljungan, which was used to float logs out to the coast. The Njurunda area is also home to the ruins of a 12th-century church.",
"score": "1.3983772"
}
] | [
"Njurunda SK\n Njurunda SK is an ice hockey team in Njurunda, Sweden. They play in the Swedish Division 2, the fourth level of ice hockey in Sweden. Their home arena is the Njurunda ishall, which opened in 1986. Henrik Zetterberg used to play for the club's youth team. Njurunda had previously played in the third-level Division 1, but elected to drop out of the league during the 2012-13 season, following the conclusion of the Division 1B continuation series.",
"Nakuru AllStars\n the club. Vendelboe was part of a consortium which purchased the football club AC Nakuru, and included and merged it with the rest of the Nakuru AllStars club. Among the members of the new technical staff was Sammy Nyongesa who was a player with the original team in 1969 when it last won the league. He has also previously coached the Kenya national football team and is known in Nakuru for running the Youth Olympic centre that produced such as players as Ambrose Ayoyi and John Muiruri In 2011, the Nakuru AllStars played in the FKL Nationwide League. When the new owners came in the former team had amassed 9 points from 12 matches and were firmly in the relegation spot but by the end of the season the team ",
"Njurunda\nFredrik Modin – Hockey player ; Henrik Zetterberg – Hockey player ; Lars Dahlqvist – Skier ; Fredrik Wikingsson – Journalist ; Sebastian Lauritzen – Hockey player ; Mathias Månsson – Hockey player ",
"Skuru IK (women's handball)\n Skuru IK Handboll is a women's handball team based in Nacka, Sweden, that competes in the SHE Women. They play their home matches in Nacka Bollhall, which have capacity for 460 spectators. They play in green shirts and green shorts.",
"Kenneth Nkweta Nju\n Nju played for General Caballero ZC.",
"JKU S.C.\n Jeshi la Kujenga Uchumi Sports Club, or simply JKU SC is a football club from Zanzibar. The team won the Nyerere Cup in 1974.",
"Nakuru Athletic Club\n Nakuru Athletic Club is a sports club located in Nakuru capital of Rift Valley Province, Kenya. The club also has a cricket team playing in the Rift Valley cricket league. The club ground has hosted many High profile cricket games including a game featuring Rift Valley Cricket Association XI v Minor Counties of England. The Nakuru Athletic Club is also home ground for Nakuru RFC, a local rugby union team. Nakuru Athletic club has also a field hockey team playing in the National League. Nakuru's football team, Nakuru AllStars, who play in the Nationwide Division, has their training sessions at Nakuru Athletic Ground. FG Soccer Academy - Nakuru's premier soccer academy, a non for profit soccer school that combines football, character development and education also uses Nakuru Athletic Ground as their training complex Under the colonial rule, indigenous Kenyan were barred from Nakuru Athletic Club. Thus they were using the “African Sports Stadium,” now known as Afraha Stadium.",
"Geoffrey Sserunkuma\n He first began playing for the Cranes in the year 2002. He was part of the Uganda Cranes team that participated in the 2016 Championship of Africa Nations tournament in Rwanda and scored against Zimbabwe in their 1-1 draw. Sserunkuma was one of the six locally based players in the Cranes squad which represented Uganda in 2017 Africa Cup of Nations at Gabon.",
"Jamila Lunkuse\n2013 - Rwenzori Uganda Sports Press Association Sportsman of the Month (April) ",
"SC Villa\n Sports Club Villa is an association football club based in Uganda. They play their home games at the Mandela National Stadium in Wakiso District.",
"SK Njård\n SK Njård is a Norwegian multi-sports club from Vestre Aker, Oslo. It is named after Njörðr in Norse mythology. Founded in 1924, it has sections for alpine skiing, fencing, team handball, cross-country skiing, tennis, gymnastics, and rhythmic gymnastics, orienteering together with IL Heming (as Heming/Njård), and has also had sections for bandy and basketball. Its arena Njårdhallen is used for indoor sports. Its women's handball team plays in the second highest Norwegian league. Their most famous player was goalkeeper Jeanette Nilsen. Skiers in Njård include Celine Brun-Lie. Also, 2008 Olympic fencer Sturla Torkildsen represents the club.",
"Sport in Sri Lanka\n Games such as Kotta Pora (Pillow fight), Ankeliya (tugging the horn), Kana mutti bindeema (breaking pots), Porapol Gaseema, Lissana gaha nageema (climbing the greasy pole),Banis Kaema (bun eating contest) and Gudu Keliya are played during the Avurudu times.",
"Ronald Ketjijere\n Ronald Himeekua Ketjijere (born December 12, 1987) is a Namibian football holding midfielder who plays for the Namibia national football team. He is the current captain of the Brave Warriors and can also play as an offensive midfielder. He previously played for Katutura giant African Stars in the Namibia Premier League, having joined the team in 2009 from UNAM.",
"Jean Sseninde\n Following her graduation from Kitende, Sseninde sought counsel from Majida Nantanda, the head coach of the Uganda women's national soccer team. Nantanda recommended that Jean should join a professional football club in England, through the Federation of Uganda Football Associations (FUFA). Prior to joining the London Phoenix Ladies FC, Jean played for the Charlton Athletic Women's Football Club, for one season. Before that, she played for the Queens Park Rangers Ladies Football Club (QPRLFC), for three seasons.",
"Mombasa Sports Club\n Other disciplines at Mombasa Sports Club include Basketball, Squash, Snooker, Tennis, Bowling and Bridge.",
"Sport in Kenya\n Field hockey is also played in Kenya. The Kenya men's national field hockey team had its best Hockey World Cup result in 1971, when it finished fourth. The team also participated in the Summer Olympics seven times, finishing 6th in 1964. The home venue of the team is the City Park Hockey Stadium in Nairobi. The hockey sport in Kenya is overseen by the Kenya Hockey Union (KHU).",
"Njala Quan Sports Academy\n Njalla Quan Sports Academy, or NQSA, is a football club in Cameroon. The academy was founded by Mr. Henry Njalla Quan on 15 September 2000. They currently play in the top-flight football league of Cameroon ( MTN Elite One ). Stade Municipal de Limbé is their home stadium, with a capacity of 12,000.",
"Christophe Nduwarugira\n Nduwarugira was invited by Lofty Naseem, the national team coach, to represent Burundi in the 2014 African Nations Championship held in South Africa.",
"Ivan Ntege\n In January 2014, coach Milutin Sredojević, invited him to be a part of the Uganda national football team squad for the 2014 African Nations Championship. The team placed third in the group stage of the competition after beating Burkina Faso, drawing with Zimbabwe and losing to Morocco.",
"Njurunda\n Njurunda is a small village in Sundsvall Municipality, located in Västernorrland County, Sweden. The village is situated at the mouth of the Ljungan river and located about 17 kilometers south of Sundsvall. It is primarily a sleeper town for Sundsvall, with a residential population of about 5,000 households and about 450 small to medium-sized businesses. The elementary school is Kyrkmons skola, which has about 339 students, most of whom head on to Kvissleby and Nivrenaskolan for their 7th - 9th grades before they finally move on to the secondary schools in Sundsvall. The town was the seat of the former Nivren rural municipality, which later was swallowed by Sundsvall municipality in the consolidation process during the 1960s. Historically, there have been people living in Njurunda since the 5th century. The population, however, did not grow significantly until the 14th century, but late that century the Black Death halted this growth. Industrialization began around 1830 when several saw mills were established close to the Ljungan, which was used to float logs out to the coast. The Njurunda area is also home to the ruins of a 12th-century church."
] |
What sport does 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final | 3,169,996 | 93 | [
{
"id": "129283",
"title": "2009 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Dnipro Stadium on May 31, 2009. The match was the 18th Ukrainian Cup final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Vorskla Poltava. The 2009 final was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Dnipropetrovsk. Vorskla Poltava, as Ukrainian Cup winners, qualified for the UEFA Europa League play-off round.",
"score": "1.8128573"
},
{
"id": "29190557",
"title": "2008 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2008 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Metalist Stadium on May 7, 2008. The match was the 17th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The 2008 Ukrainian Cup FInal was the first to be held outside of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won the match 2–0 through goals from Oleksandr Gladkiy and Oleksiy Gai. The match had five red cards issued, two to Dynamo players and three to Shakhtar players. The match also had six yellow cards (Gladkiy received two), four of which were given to Shakhtar players and two to Dynamo players. This was in part because of players' violent behavior and also because referee Victor Shvetsov made several misjudgments.",
"score": "1.7802248"
},
{
"id": "10894307",
"title": "2010 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2010 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played place at the Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, on 16 May 2010. The match was the 19th Ukrainian Cup final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Tavriya Simferopol. The final was the second time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Kharkiv. The Ukrainian Cup winners qualified for the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League play-off round. Tavriya played in their second cup final after last appearing in 1994, where the side lost to Chornomorets Odessa on penalty kicks (5–3) after the matched finished 0–0 after extra time. Metalurh Donetsk were playing in their first cup final.",
"score": "1.731604"
},
{
"id": "11047269",
"title": "2005 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2005 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 29 May 2005. The match was the 14th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final. The game was remembered for involving the most foreign players in the Ukrainian Cup finals: out of 36 players on both teams' rosters, 28 were from outside of Ukraine. Of the starting line-ups, there were five Brazilians, four Ukrainians, four Romanians, and others. Refereeing the match was a Norwegian team of referees.",
"score": "1.7118208"
},
{
"id": "27447311",
"title": "2009–10 Ukrainian Cup",
"text": " The Cup final was played on May 16, 2010.",
"score": "1.703119"
},
{
"id": "10813556",
"title": "2006 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2006 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Olympic NSC on 2 May 2006. The match was the 15th Ukrainian Cup final, and it was contested by Metalurh Zaporizhzhia and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final.",
"score": "1.6661054"
},
{
"id": "1186029",
"title": "2012 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2012 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Olimpiysky NSC, Kiev, on 6 May 2012. The match was the 21st Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time since 2007 that the Cup final had returned to Kiev. Since Shakhtar had qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League, Metalurh would qualify for the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Metalurh was selected as the home team.",
"score": "1.6547216"
},
{
"id": "11266952",
"title": "2004 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2004 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 30 May 2004. The match was the 13th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the cup final.",
"score": "1.650378"
},
{
"id": "1811300",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2011 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Yuvileiny Stadium, Sumy, on 25 May 2011. The match was the 20th Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was played in Sumy. Since this match was between two teams that had qualified for the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, the sixth-placed team in the 2010–11 Ukrainian Premier League season would qualify for the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Dynamo was selected as the home team. After a goalless first half, Shakhtar's superiority prevailed and they won the match 2–0, enabling them to win the Ukrainian treble of the Ukrainian Super Cup, the Premier League and the Ukrainian Cup.",
"score": "1.6467135"
},
{
"id": "33142129",
"title": "Cup of Ukrainian PFL 2009 (winter)",
"text": " ====Third Place Game ==== ====Final ====",
"score": "1.636206"
},
{
"id": "10894309",
"title": "2010 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " Tavriya had met Metalurh Donetsk previously in the Ukrainian Cup competition in the quarter-Final of the 2003–04 edition. In that match, Tavriya advanced on penalty kicks 10–9 after the score finished 1–1 after extra time.",
"score": "1.6320312"
},
{
"id": "1811303",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The match was broadcast on ICTV in Ukraine.",
"score": "1.6238455"
},
{
"id": "10096336",
"title": "2014 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The match was broadcast on Futbol 2 and Ukrayina in Ukraine.",
"score": "1.619653"
},
{
"id": "6159518",
"title": "2018 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2018 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that has been scheduled to be played on May 9, 2018 in Dnipro. This was the second time the cup final has been held in Dnipro. The match was the 27th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union.",
"score": "1.6120439"
},
{
"id": "27246699",
"title": "1997 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 25, 1997. The match was the 6th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by FC Shakhtar Donetsk and FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final was the fifth to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won by a single goal netted by Serhiy Atelkin in the 36th minute. There also were a couple of yellow cards issued at this game, both of them to Shakhtar players: Potskhveria and Hennadiy Orbu.",
"score": "1.6116922"
},
{
"id": "1811302",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " This was the sixth Ukrainian Cup final between the two teams. Dynamo had defeated Shakhtar three times out of the five Cup Finals. In the last final, however, in 2008, Shakhtar was victorious. The two teams also met in a semi final in 2008–09 and in the quarter-final in 2009–10 in which Shakhtar was victorious in both games. Dynamo had appeared in 11 finals, winning 9, while opponents Shakhtar had appeared in 10 finals, winning 6.",
"score": "1.6114191"
},
{
"id": "6159520",
"title": "2018 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The game between Shakhtar and Dynamo has become the main fixture of every season and received a nickname of Klasychne which means Classic. Before this game both teams met in a final of Ukrainian Cup nine times, the first being back in 2002. Games between the two clubs are known to be very intense and out of the nine previous meetings in the final, only two in 2003 and 2017 did not have red cards shown to players. There were total of 14 red cards shown with 13 in finals only. Before this final out of the previous nine Shakhtar won 4 games and Dynamo won ",
"score": "1.6097498"
},
{
"id": "2158938",
"title": "1998 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 31, 1998. The match was the 7th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by both Kyivan clubs FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC CSKA Kyiv. The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final was the seventh to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Dynamo won by two goals netted by Andriy Shevchenko on the 1st and 33rd minutes. CSKA managed to answer with a single tally from Novokhatsky on the 68th minute, which was scored on the rebound right after the missed penalty kick. Shovkovskyi managed to deflect the penalty kick from Oliynyk. There also were several yellow cards issued at this game, all of them to Army players: Semchuk, Hohil, and Kripak.",
"score": "1.6096284"
},
{
"id": "10209522",
"title": "2019 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2019 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that was played on May 15, 2019 in Zaporizhia between Shakhtar Donetsk and Inhulets Petrove. The match is the 28th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union. This is the first time the cup final would be held in Zaporizhia. If Inhulets win the cup, they will qualify to the group stage of 2019–20 UEFA Europa League, because Shakhtar have already qualified for 2019–20 UEFA Champions League. For Slavutych Arena this is the second time of hosting games of such level after hosting the 2010 Ukrainian Super Cup. This will be the first final of the Ukrainian Cup competitions that features a team from a second tier division.",
"score": "1.6083636"
},
{
"id": "10096334",
"title": "2014 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The final was originally to be played at Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, but was moved to Butovsky Vorskla Stadium in Poltava. Due to the May 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine, the Football Federation of Ukraine (FFU), after being advised to do so by the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, decided that the match would be played behind closed doors for security reasons. The decision to have no spectators at the match was met with criticism and protest by both clubs fans including picketing of the House of Football in Kiev a day before the match and was reverted after the FFU held an emergency meeting and conferred with club officials and government security.",
"score": "1.6063945"
}
] | [
"2009 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Dnipro Stadium on May 31, 2009. The match was the 18th Ukrainian Cup final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Vorskla Poltava. The 2009 final was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Dnipropetrovsk. Vorskla Poltava, as Ukrainian Cup winners, qualified for the UEFA Europa League play-off round.",
"2008 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2008 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Metalist Stadium on May 7, 2008. The match was the 17th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The 2008 Ukrainian Cup FInal was the first to be held outside of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won the match 2–0 through goals from Oleksandr Gladkiy and Oleksiy Gai. The match had five red cards issued, two to Dynamo players and three to Shakhtar players. The match also had six yellow cards (Gladkiy received two), four of which were given to Shakhtar players and two to Dynamo players. This was in part because of players' violent behavior and also because referee Victor Shvetsov made several misjudgments.",
"2010 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2010 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played place at the Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, on 16 May 2010. The match was the 19th Ukrainian Cup final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Tavriya Simferopol. The final was the second time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Kharkiv. The Ukrainian Cup winners qualified for the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League play-off round. Tavriya played in their second cup final after last appearing in 1994, where the side lost to Chornomorets Odessa on penalty kicks (5–3) after the matched finished 0–0 after extra time. Metalurh Donetsk were playing in their first cup final.",
"2005 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2005 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 29 May 2005. The match was the 14th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final. The game was remembered for involving the most foreign players in the Ukrainian Cup finals: out of 36 players on both teams' rosters, 28 were from outside of Ukraine. Of the starting line-ups, there were five Brazilians, four Ukrainians, four Romanians, and others. Refereeing the match was a Norwegian team of referees.",
"2009–10 Ukrainian Cup\n The Cup final was played on May 16, 2010.",
"2006 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2006 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Olympic NSC on 2 May 2006. The match was the 15th Ukrainian Cup final, and it was contested by Metalurh Zaporizhzhia and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final.",
"2012 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2012 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Olimpiysky NSC, Kiev, on 6 May 2012. The match was the 21st Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time since 2007 that the Cup final had returned to Kiev. Since Shakhtar had qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League, Metalurh would qualify for the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Metalurh was selected as the home team.",
"2004 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2004 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 30 May 2004. The match was the 13th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the cup final.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2011 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Yuvileiny Stadium, Sumy, on 25 May 2011. The match was the 20th Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was played in Sumy. Since this match was between two teams that had qualified for the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, the sixth-placed team in the 2010–11 Ukrainian Premier League season would qualify for the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Dynamo was selected as the home team. After a goalless first half, Shakhtar's superiority prevailed and they won the match 2–0, enabling them to win the Ukrainian treble of the Ukrainian Super Cup, the Premier League and the Ukrainian Cup.",
"Cup of Ukrainian PFL 2009 (winter)\n ====Third Place Game ==== ====Final ====",
"2010 Ukrainian Cup Final\n Tavriya had met Metalurh Donetsk previously in the Ukrainian Cup competition in the quarter-Final of the 2003–04 edition. In that match, Tavriya advanced on penalty kicks 10–9 after the score finished 1–1 after extra time.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The match was broadcast on ICTV in Ukraine.",
"2014 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The match was broadcast on Futbol 2 and Ukrayina in Ukraine.",
"2018 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2018 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that has been scheduled to be played on May 9, 2018 in Dnipro. This was the second time the cup final has been held in Dnipro. The match was the 27th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union.",
"1997 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 25, 1997. The match was the 6th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by FC Shakhtar Donetsk and FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final was the fifth to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won by a single goal netted by Serhiy Atelkin in the 36th minute. There also were a couple of yellow cards issued at this game, both of them to Shakhtar players: Potskhveria and Hennadiy Orbu.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n This was the sixth Ukrainian Cup final between the two teams. Dynamo had defeated Shakhtar three times out of the five Cup Finals. In the last final, however, in 2008, Shakhtar was victorious. The two teams also met in a semi final in 2008–09 and in the quarter-final in 2009–10 in which Shakhtar was victorious in both games. Dynamo had appeared in 11 finals, winning 9, while opponents Shakhtar had appeared in 10 finals, winning 6.",
"2018 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The game between Shakhtar and Dynamo has become the main fixture of every season and received a nickname of Klasychne which means Classic. Before this game both teams met in a final of Ukrainian Cup nine times, the first being back in 2002. Games between the two clubs are known to be very intense and out of the nine previous meetings in the final, only two in 2003 and 2017 did not have red cards shown to players. There were total of 14 red cards shown with 13 in finals only. Before this final out of the previous nine Shakhtar won 4 games and Dynamo won ",
"1998 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 31, 1998. The match was the 7th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by both Kyivan clubs FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC CSKA Kyiv. The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final was the seventh to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Dynamo won by two goals netted by Andriy Shevchenko on the 1st and 33rd minutes. CSKA managed to answer with a single tally from Novokhatsky on the 68th minute, which was scored on the rebound right after the missed penalty kick. Shovkovskyi managed to deflect the penalty kick from Oliynyk. There also were several yellow cards issued at this game, all of them to Army players: Semchuk, Hohil, and Kripak.",
"2019 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2019 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that was played on May 15, 2019 in Zaporizhia between Shakhtar Donetsk and Inhulets Petrove. The match is the 28th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union. This is the first time the cup final would be held in Zaporizhia. If Inhulets win the cup, they will qualify to the group stage of 2019–20 UEFA Europa League, because Shakhtar have already qualified for 2019–20 UEFA Champions League. For Slavutych Arena this is the second time of hosting games of such level after hosting the 2010 Ukrainian Super Cup. This will be the first final of the Ukrainian Cup competitions that features a team from a second tier division.",
"2014 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The final was originally to be played at Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, but was moved to Butovsky Vorskla Stadium in Poltava. Due to the May 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine, the Football Federation of Ukraine (FFU), after being advised to do so by the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, decided that the match would be played behind closed doors for security reasons. The decision to have no spectators at the match was met with criticism and protest by both clubs fans including picketing of the House of Football in Kiev a day before the match and was reverted after the FFU held an emergency meeting and conferred with club officials and government security."
] |
What sport does Krasen Trifonov play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Krasen Trifonov | 66,701 | 70 | [
{
"id": "15792965",
"title": "Krasen Trifonov",
"text": " Krasen Trifonov (Bulgarian: Красен Трифонов; born 5 December 1983) is a Bulgarian football midfielder who plays for Pavlikeni.",
"score": "1.8034701"
},
{
"id": "5446301",
"title": "Alexandr Trifonov",
"text": " Alexandr Trifonov (born March 13, 1986) is a Kazakh biathlete. He competed in the 2010 Winter Olympics for Kazakhstan. His best finish was 18th, as part of the Kazakh relay team. He also finished 69th in the individual. As of February 2013, his best performance at the Biathlon World Championships, is 15th, in the 2012 men's relay. His best individual performance in a World Championships is 80th, in the 2012 sprint. As of February 2013, his best Biathlon World Cup finish is 15th, achieved in two men's relay events. His best individual finish is 53rd, in the 2010/11 sprint race at Östersund.",
"score": "1.7766794"
},
{
"id": "15792966",
"title": "Krasen Trifonov",
"text": " Trifonov spent four seasons at Lokomotiv Gorna Oryahovitsa but was released in July 2017. In June 2018, he returned to the club following a short stint at Pavlikeni.",
"score": "1.7133117"
},
{
"id": "27827623",
"title": "Trifonov",
"text": "Aleksandr Trifonov (biathlete) (born 1986), Kazakh biathlete ; Aleksandr Trifonov (canoeist), Russian sprint canoeist ; Daniil Trifonov (born 1991), Russian concert pianist and composer ; Edward Trifonov (born 1937), Russian-born Israeli molecular biophysicist ; Filip Trifonov (born 1947), Bulgarian actor ; Iliyan Trifonov (born 1984), Bulgarian football player ; Ivan Trifonov (born 1948), Russian cyclist ; Kamen Trifonov (born 1990), Bulgarian football player ; Krasen Trifonov (born 1983), Bulgarian football midfielder ; Oleg Trifonov (born 1981), Russian football player ; Petar Trifonov (born 1984), Bulgarian football player ; Rumen Trifonov (born 1985), Bulgarian football player ; Slavi Trifonov (born 1966), Bulgarian actor, singer and politician ; Tihomir Trifonov (born 1986), Bulgarian football player ; Valentin Trifonov (1888–1938), Russian revolutionary ; Ventsislav Trifonov (born 1992), Bulgarian volleyball player ; Yury Trifonov (1925–1981), Russian author Trifonov (Трифонов) is a Bulgarian and Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Trifonova. It may refer to:",
"score": "1.6000772"
},
{
"id": "31251394",
"title": "Iliyan Trifonov",
"text": " Trifonov started his football career with Etar 1924 before moving to Slavia Sofia in the year 2005. He made his A PFG debut for the Sofia-based club in August 2005, but did not become a regular to the end of the season and returned to Etar.",
"score": "1.5486877"
},
{
"id": "33171669",
"title": "Rumen Trifonov",
"text": " Trifonov earned his first call-up to the Bulgaria national side in March 2011 for the Euro 2012 qualifier against Switzerland and the friendly match versus Cyprus, but did not feature in these games. On 22 February 2018, Trifonov joined Third League club Spartak Pleven. In June 2018, he moved to Second League side Montana.",
"score": "1.5171592"
},
{
"id": "33171670",
"title": "Rumen Trifonov",
"text": " Missing the most of the 2019-20 season due to an injury in the autumn 2019, 35-year old Trifonov decided to retire at the end of the year. In February 2020 he returned to PFC CSKA Sofia as a youth coach, where he became head coach of the players from 2004 and would also help the U17 team.",
"score": "1.4926212"
},
{
"id": "1831318",
"title": "Petar Trifonov (diver)",
"text": " Petar Trifonov (born 13 July 1972) is a Bulgarian diver. He competed in the men's 3 metre springboard event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4832387"
},
{
"id": "31251393",
"title": "Iliyan Trifonov",
"text": " Iliyan Trifonov (Илиян Трифонов; born 30 September 1984) is a Bulgarian footballer who plays as a midfielder.",
"score": "1.4743744"
},
{
"id": "33171668",
"title": "Rumen Trifonov",
"text": " Rumen Trifonov (Румен Трифонов; born 21 February 1985) is a former Bulgarian professional footballer who played as a defender. He is currently working as a youth coach for CSKA Sofia.",
"score": "1.4712864"
},
{
"id": "26321701",
"title": "Tihomir Dovramadjiev",
"text": " Varna Sport Universiade in the chess section. In 1997, he won 1st place with the team of \"Kaissa\" (Varna) at the youth team championship in Plovdiv. He then competed for teams from Varna, as well as for \"Lokomotiv\" (Plovdiv, Bulgaria). He then he played in German team league, where he competed for SV Nashuatec (Berlin, Germany), where they won the German Landesliga for the 2003/2004 season, defeating the team of \"Gillette\" in the decisive match. For the team of \"Nashuatec\", he recorded a result of 22 wins, 2 draws and 0 defeats. He has successfully participated in a number of online championships, repeatedly ranking in the top three of tournaments held by ChessBase / Playchess Germany. His FIDE Elo rating is 2356 (November 2011).",
"score": "1.4662309"
},
{
"id": "14924839",
"title": "Artemi Panarin",
"text": " Panarin was born and raised in Korkino. He developed an early interest in ice skating. His maternal grandfather, a former amateur hockey player, encouraged Panarin to play hockey when he was five years old. He helped train Panarin and would often drive him to hockey tournaments in Tyumen. Panarin attended the Traktor Ice Hockey school in Chelyabinsk, where he trained six days a week for six months a year.",
"score": "1.461977"
},
{
"id": "26218769",
"title": "Konstantin Shafranov",
"text": " Konstantin Vitalievich Shafranov (Константи́н Вита́льевич Шафра́нов) (born September 11, 1968) is a Kazakhstani former professional ice hockey player who played five games in the National Hockey League. He played for the St. Louis Blues. In 1996, he won the Gary F. Longman Memorial Trophy as the best rookie in the International Hockey League (IHL). Two years later he was named to the IHL's end of season all-star team, as the second best right-wing in the league. He is currently the Fort Wayne Komets' Assistant Coach.",
"score": "1.4557619"
},
{
"id": "6415280",
"title": "Soslan Kachmazov",
"text": " the player played 52 games in the second division. In early 2016, the defender again went abroad, this time to the Armenian \"Banants\". The debut match in the Armenian championship was played on March 2, 2016 against Pyunik. In just a calendar year, I played 15 matches in the national championship. With his team he won the Armenian Cup of the season 2015/16, including playing in the final match against \"Mika\". Also played in the matches of the Europa League against Cypriot Omonia. After leaving Banants, he was on display in the Belarusian Naftan, but left the team because of disagreements with head coach Oleg Sidorenkov. In 2017, playing at the amateur level for \"Kuban-Holding\" (Pavlovskaya) became the champion of the Krasnodar Territory.",
"score": "1.4515009"
},
{
"id": "1020716",
"title": "Krasen Kralev",
"text": " Krassen Kirilov Kralev (Красен Кирилов Кралев), born 2 January 1967 in Varna, is a Bulgarian businessman and politician, who is currently the Minister of Youth and Sports of Bulgaria as part of the Third Borisov Government.",
"score": "1.447547"
},
{
"id": "2477317",
"title": "Sergey Trishin",
"text": " Sergey Trishin (born Moscow, 12 December 1984) is a Russian rugby union player. He plays as a centre. He played for VVA Saracens and currently plays for Enisei-STM, in the Rugby Premier League. He has 56 caps for Russia, since 2005, with 5 tries scored, 25 points on aggregate. He had his debut at the 52-12 win over the Czech Republic, at 12 November 2005, in Krasnodar, for the Six Nations B. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in a single game and without scoring. He had his final cap at the 32-27 loss to Japan, at 24 November 2018, in Gloucester, England, in a friendly game.",
"score": "1.4423018"
},
{
"id": "8663671",
"title": "CIS national ice hockey team",
"text": " National Hockey League (NHL), which did not stop play for the Olympics. Thus, the team used players from the Russian and Swiss leagues instead, and head coach Viktor Tikhonov, known for his authoritarian style of coaching, was forced to modify his strategy, as he had no leverage over the players. Despite the absence of superstars, the CIS team had no problems with talent, boasting experienced veterans Vyacheslav Bykov, Andrei Khomutov and Alexei Zhamnov. The team was composed almost entirely of Russians, with Lithuanian-born Darius Kasparaitis and Ukrainian-born Alexei Zhitnik the only non-Russians. They played in three friendlies against Austria, Canada, and Italy in January ",
"score": "1.437628"
},
{
"id": "30803200",
"title": "Jim Trifunov",
"text": " James Trifunov (July 18, 1903 – June 27, 1993) was a Canadian freestyle sport wrestler who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics, in the 1928 Summer Olympics, and in the 1932 Summer Olympics. His parents Mr. and Mrs. Rade Trifunov came from Jarkovac, Austria-Hungary, now Serbia, to Canada in March 1902 and settled in Truax, Saskatchewan, where James was born the following year.",
"score": "1.4373233"
},
{
"id": "25589063",
"title": "Atvars Tribuncovs",
"text": " Atvars Tribuncovs (born October 14, 1976) is a professional ice hockey player. He competed for Latvia at the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympics. Tribuncovs is currently playing for Arystan Temirtau in the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship league.",
"score": "1.4347233"
},
{
"id": "1739902",
"title": "Daniil Trifonov",
"text": " Daniil Olegovich Trifonov (Дании́л Оле́гович Три́фонов; born 5 March 1991) is a Russian pianist and composer. Described by The Globe and Mail as \"arguably today's leading classical virtuoso\" and by The Times as \"without question the most astounding pianist of our age\", Trifonov's honors include a Grammy Award win in 2018 and the Gramophone Classical Music Awards' Artist of the Year Award in 2016. The New York Times has noted that \"few artists have burst onto the classical music scene in recent years with the incandescence\" of Trifonov. He has performed as soloist with such orchestras as the New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Mariinsky ",
"score": "1.4333377"
}
] | [
"Krasen Trifonov\n Krasen Trifonov (Bulgarian: Красен Трифонов; born 5 December 1983) is a Bulgarian football midfielder who plays for Pavlikeni.",
"Alexandr Trifonov\n Alexandr Trifonov (born March 13, 1986) is a Kazakh biathlete. He competed in the 2010 Winter Olympics for Kazakhstan. His best finish was 18th, as part of the Kazakh relay team. He also finished 69th in the individual. As of February 2013, his best performance at the Biathlon World Championships, is 15th, in the 2012 men's relay. His best individual performance in a World Championships is 80th, in the 2012 sprint. As of February 2013, his best Biathlon World Cup finish is 15th, achieved in two men's relay events. His best individual finish is 53rd, in the 2010/11 sprint race at Östersund.",
"Krasen Trifonov\n Trifonov spent four seasons at Lokomotiv Gorna Oryahovitsa but was released in July 2017. In June 2018, he returned to the club following a short stint at Pavlikeni.",
"Trifonov\nAleksandr Trifonov (biathlete) (born 1986), Kazakh biathlete ; Aleksandr Trifonov (canoeist), Russian sprint canoeist ; Daniil Trifonov (born 1991), Russian concert pianist and composer ; Edward Trifonov (born 1937), Russian-born Israeli molecular biophysicist ; Filip Trifonov (born 1947), Bulgarian actor ; Iliyan Trifonov (born 1984), Bulgarian football player ; Ivan Trifonov (born 1948), Russian cyclist ; Kamen Trifonov (born 1990), Bulgarian football player ; Krasen Trifonov (born 1983), Bulgarian football midfielder ; Oleg Trifonov (born 1981), Russian football player ; Petar Trifonov (born 1984), Bulgarian football player ; Rumen Trifonov (born 1985), Bulgarian football player ; Slavi Trifonov (born 1966), Bulgarian actor, singer and politician ; Tihomir Trifonov (born 1986), Bulgarian football player ; Valentin Trifonov (1888–1938), Russian revolutionary ; Ventsislav Trifonov (born 1992), Bulgarian volleyball player ; Yury Trifonov (1925–1981), Russian author Trifonov (Трифонов) is a Bulgarian and Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Trifonova. It may refer to:",
"Iliyan Trifonov\n Trifonov started his football career with Etar 1924 before moving to Slavia Sofia in the year 2005. He made his A PFG debut for the Sofia-based club in August 2005, but did not become a regular to the end of the season and returned to Etar.",
"Rumen Trifonov\n Trifonov earned his first call-up to the Bulgaria national side in March 2011 for the Euro 2012 qualifier against Switzerland and the friendly match versus Cyprus, but did not feature in these games. On 22 February 2018, Trifonov joined Third League club Spartak Pleven. In June 2018, he moved to Second League side Montana.",
"Rumen Trifonov\n Missing the most of the 2019-20 season due to an injury in the autumn 2019, 35-year old Trifonov decided to retire at the end of the year. In February 2020 he returned to PFC CSKA Sofia as a youth coach, where he became head coach of the players from 2004 and would also help the U17 team.",
"Petar Trifonov (diver)\n Petar Trifonov (born 13 July 1972) is a Bulgarian diver. He competed in the men's 3 metre springboard event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.",
"Iliyan Trifonov\n Iliyan Trifonov (Илиян Трифонов; born 30 September 1984) is a Bulgarian footballer who plays as a midfielder.",
"Rumen Trifonov\n Rumen Trifonov (Румен Трифонов; born 21 February 1985) is a former Bulgarian professional footballer who played as a defender. He is currently working as a youth coach for CSKA Sofia.",
"Tihomir Dovramadjiev\n Varna Sport Universiade in the chess section. In 1997, he won 1st place with the team of \"Kaissa\" (Varna) at the youth team championship in Plovdiv. He then competed for teams from Varna, as well as for \"Lokomotiv\" (Plovdiv, Bulgaria). He then he played in German team league, where he competed for SV Nashuatec (Berlin, Germany), where they won the German Landesliga for the 2003/2004 season, defeating the team of \"Gillette\" in the decisive match. For the team of \"Nashuatec\", he recorded a result of 22 wins, 2 draws and 0 defeats. He has successfully participated in a number of online championships, repeatedly ranking in the top three of tournaments held by ChessBase / Playchess Germany. His FIDE Elo rating is 2356 (November 2011).",
"Artemi Panarin\n Panarin was born and raised in Korkino. He developed an early interest in ice skating. His maternal grandfather, a former amateur hockey player, encouraged Panarin to play hockey when he was five years old. He helped train Panarin and would often drive him to hockey tournaments in Tyumen. Panarin attended the Traktor Ice Hockey school in Chelyabinsk, where he trained six days a week for six months a year.",
"Konstantin Shafranov\n Konstantin Vitalievich Shafranov (Константи́н Вита́льевич Шафра́нов) (born September 11, 1968) is a Kazakhstani former professional ice hockey player who played five games in the National Hockey League. He played for the St. Louis Blues. In 1996, he won the Gary F. Longman Memorial Trophy as the best rookie in the International Hockey League (IHL). Two years later he was named to the IHL's end of season all-star team, as the second best right-wing in the league. He is currently the Fort Wayne Komets' Assistant Coach.",
"Soslan Kachmazov\n the player played 52 games in the second division. In early 2016, the defender again went abroad, this time to the Armenian \"Banants\". The debut match in the Armenian championship was played on March 2, 2016 against Pyunik. In just a calendar year, I played 15 matches in the national championship. With his team he won the Armenian Cup of the season 2015/16, including playing in the final match against \"Mika\". Also played in the matches of the Europa League against Cypriot Omonia. After leaving Banants, he was on display in the Belarusian Naftan, but left the team because of disagreements with head coach Oleg Sidorenkov. In 2017, playing at the amateur level for \"Kuban-Holding\" (Pavlovskaya) became the champion of the Krasnodar Territory.",
"Krasen Kralev\n Krassen Kirilov Kralev (Красен Кирилов Кралев), born 2 January 1967 in Varna, is a Bulgarian businessman and politician, who is currently the Minister of Youth and Sports of Bulgaria as part of the Third Borisov Government.",
"Sergey Trishin\n Sergey Trishin (born Moscow, 12 December 1984) is a Russian rugby union player. He plays as a centre. He played for VVA Saracens and currently plays for Enisei-STM, in the Rugby Premier League. He has 56 caps for Russia, since 2005, with 5 tries scored, 25 points on aggregate. He had his debut at the 52-12 win over the Czech Republic, at 12 November 2005, in Krasnodar, for the Six Nations B. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in a single game and without scoring. He had his final cap at the 32-27 loss to Japan, at 24 November 2018, in Gloucester, England, in a friendly game.",
"CIS national ice hockey team\n National Hockey League (NHL), which did not stop play for the Olympics. Thus, the team used players from the Russian and Swiss leagues instead, and head coach Viktor Tikhonov, known for his authoritarian style of coaching, was forced to modify his strategy, as he had no leverage over the players. Despite the absence of superstars, the CIS team had no problems with talent, boasting experienced veterans Vyacheslav Bykov, Andrei Khomutov and Alexei Zhamnov. The team was composed almost entirely of Russians, with Lithuanian-born Darius Kasparaitis and Ukrainian-born Alexei Zhitnik the only non-Russians. They played in three friendlies against Austria, Canada, and Italy in January ",
"Jim Trifunov\n James Trifunov (July 18, 1903 – June 27, 1993) was a Canadian freestyle sport wrestler who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics, in the 1928 Summer Olympics, and in the 1932 Summer Olympics. His parents Mr. and Mrs. Rade Trifunov came from Jarkovac, Austria-Hungary, now Serbia, to Canada in March 1902 and settled in Truax, Saskatchewan, where James was born the following year.",
"Atvars Tribuncovs\n Atvars Tribuncovs (born October 14, 1976) is a professional ice hockey player. He competed for Latvia at the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympics. Tribuncovs is currently playing for Arystan Temirtau in the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship league.",
"Daniil Trifonov\n Daniil Olegovich Trifonov (Дании́л Оле́гович Три́фонов; born 5 March 1991) is a Russian pianist and composer. Described by The Globe and Mail as \"arguably today's leading classical virtuoso\" and by The Times as \"without question the most astounding pianist of our age\", Trifonov's honors include a Grammy Award win in 2018 and the Gramophone Classical Music Awards' Artist of the Year Award in 2016. The New York Times has noted that \"few artists have burst onto the classical music scene in recent years with the incandescence\" of Trifonov. He has performed as soloist with such orchestras as the New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Mariinsky "
] |
What sport does Lukáš Bodeček play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Lukáš Bodeček | 5,035,834 | 37 | [
{
"id": "5694480",
"title": "Lukáš Bodeček",
"text": " Lukáš Bodeček (born 25 April 1988) is a retired Czech footballer.",
"score": "1.8655915"
},
{
"id": "5694481",
"title": "Lukáš Bodeček",
"text": " In the summer 2017, Bodeček moved to TJ Sokol Čížová. He then moved to FK Kosoř. In addition, Bodeček also worked as a fitness coach for various of the youth teams at SK Slavia Prague since the summer 2017. As of 2020, he was still in this position at Slavia.",
"score": "1.7383797"
},
{
"id": "29374738",
"title": "Lukáš Ticháček",
"text": " Lukáš Ticháček (born 12 January 1982) is a Czech volleyball player of Polish citizenship, member of the Czech Republic men's national volleyball team, bronze medalist at the 2013 European League. On club level, he plays for Gwardia Wrocław, two–time Czech Champion (2001, 2021), five–time German Champion (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011), three–time Polish Champion (2012, 2013, 2015).",
"score": "1.6541591"
},
{
"id": "10578342",
"title": "Lukáš Bokroš",
"text": " Lukáš Bokroš (born September 9, 1982) is a Slovak former professional ice hockey left winger. Bokroš played six games for HC Zlín of the Czech Extraliga during the 2006–07 season. He also played in the Tipsport Liga for HK Dukla Trenčín, HKM Zvolen, MHC Martin and MHK Dubnica as well as in the Ligue Magnus for Ours de Villard-de-Lans. Bokroš played in the 2000 IIHF World U18 Championships for Slovakia.",
"score": "1.6492152"
},
{
"id": "14045384",
"title": "Lukáš Paukovček",
"text": " Lukáš Paukovček (born 13 November 1990) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who currently plays professionally in Slovakia for HK Dukla Trenčín of the Slovak Extraliga.",
"score": "1.604857"
},
{
"id": "7952221",
"title": "Lukas Vejdemo",
"text": " Lukas Vejdemo (born 25 January 1996) is a Swedish professional ice hockey forward currently playing for Montreal Canadiens in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a prospect under contract with the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canadiens selected him in the third round (87th overall) of the 2015 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.579088"
},
{
"id": "32978454",
"title": "Lukáš Mareček",
"text": " Lukáš Mareček (born 17 April 1990) is a Czech footballer who plays for Teplice. He is member of the Czech under-21 team. He represented the team at the 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship.",
"score": "1.5786738"
},
{
"id": "6013681",
"title": "Adam Pecháček",
"text": " Adam Pecháček (born 19 February 1995) is a Czech basketball player for Artland Dragons of the ProA and Czech national team. Pecháček spent the 2019-20 season with Phoenix Hagen, averaging 13.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 1.1 assists per game. On 14 October 2020, Pecháček signed with the PS Karlsruhe Lions. He participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"score": "1.5745893"
},
{
"id": "31496477",
"title": "Petr Bohačík",
"text": " Petr Bohačík is a professional Czech basketball player playing for BK JIP Pardubice. He was twice honoured to be part of All Star Game (2007 and 2011). He has been a member of the Czech Republic national basketball team, competing in the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, 2009 EuroBasket, and the 2011 EuroBasket. Bohačík started the 2010–11 season strongly, scoring 88 points in his first 8 matches, including 19 points against Svitavy, and being singled out by Czech news agency iDNES.cz as star of the league. He went on to score 15 points for Pardubice in a 70–50 win over Děčín in March 2011. He finished the season being nominated for the All Star Game.",
"score": "1.560655"
},
{
"id": "8133677",
"title": "Libor Hudáček",
"text": " Hudáček began playing junior ice hockey in the HK Spišská Nová Ves. He was a member of the HK Orange 20 project in the 2009–10 season, overall playing 23 games. Rest of the season he played for the HC Slovan Bratislava. In the 2010–11 season he overall played 55 games and earned 24 points for Slovan. In the next season he scored winning goal in the 7th playoffs final game against HC Košice and won the Slovak Extraliga title. After two seasons with HC Bílí Tygři Liberec in the Czech Extraliga (ELH), Hudáček returned to the KHL as a free agent, signing a one-year contract with Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk on 21 May 2020. On February 24, 2021, Hudacek joined Lausanne HC of the National League (NL) on a one-year deal through the end of the 2020/21 season. He hurt his leg in a game against EHC Biel on March 9, 2021 which required surgery, forcing him to sit out the remainder of the season.",
"score": "1.5599924"
},
{
"id": "26833539",
"title": "Lukáš Finsterle",
"text": " Lukáš Finsterle (born March 9, 1990) is a Czech professional ice hockey player for HC Bobři Valašské Meziříčí of the 2nd Czech Republic Hockey League. Finsterle played 48 games with HC Zlín in the Czech Extraliga from 2009 to 2012. He also played in the Erste Bank Eishockey Liga for Orli Znojmo and the Tipsport Liga.",
"score": "1.5539913"
},
{
"id": "8748205",
"title": "Ondřej Pavelec",
"text": " Pavelec led the Czech Republic under-17 team to a second-place finish in the 2004 Junior World Cup, and the under-18 squad to a fourth-place finish at the U-18 World Junior Cup. He was also the starting goalie for the Czech Republic junior team at the 2006 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Vancouver, Kelowna and Kamloops, British Columbia. Pavelec then played for the senior Czech team at the 2010 World Championships, helping capture a gold medal. He also competed in the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and Sochi, respectively. In between the two Olympic tournaments, he helped lead the Czechs to a bronze medal at the 2011 World Championships.",
"score": "1.5417016"
},
{
"id": "32433373",
"title": "Lukáš Křeček",
"text": " Lukáš Křeček (born 18 September 1986 in Kladno) is a Czech football player who currently plays for Vlašim on loan from FC Zbrojovka Brno.",
"score": "1.5346711"
},
{
"id": "29988325",
"title": "Samuel Buček",
"text": " Samuel Buček (born 19 December 1998) is a Slovak ice hockey player who plays as a right wing for HK Nitra of the Slovak Extraliga. He represented Slovakia in the IIHF World U20 Championship where they get Eliminated in Quarter-finals and get 8th place, Buček scoring the 3 goals and 4 assist in the tournament.",
"score": "1.5274603"
},
{
"id": "16415528",
"title": "Martin Nečas",
"text": " Nečas first played internationally with the Czech U-17 team at the 2015 World U-17 Hockey Challenge, where he served as captain and recorded five points in five games, leading his team in scoring. He again was captain for the Czechs at the 2016 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament, an invitational tournament, where he finished seventh overall in scoring with six points in four games, helping the team win gold. He later made his debut in an International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) tournament at the 2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, where he had three points for the Czechs. He also participated at the 2017 IIHF World U18 Championships, serving as captain of the Czech team, and had three assists in five games as the Czechs lost in the quarter-finals. Nečas led the 2018 World Juniors with 8 assists and tied for the scoring lead (with Casey Mittelstadt of the United States) with 11 points, helping the Czechs to a fourth-place finish. He was again named to the senior team for the 2018 IIHF World Championship, finishing with 5 points in 7 games. The Hurricanes lent Nečas to the 2019 World Juniors, where he served as captain of the Czech team.",
"score": "1.5175773"
},
{
"id": "9812996",
"title": "Jaroslav Borák",
"text": " Jaroslav Borák (born 9 November 1989 in Brno) is a Czech football player who currently plays for 1. FC Brno. He started his football career with FC Dosta Bystrc-Kníničky, but has been playing for 1. FC Brno since the age of eight. He joined the first team in January 2008. In the season 2008/09 he has played 89 minutes in 5 matches in Gambrinus liga.",
"score": "1.5127145"
},
{
"id": "26244409",
"title": "Lukáš Zátopek",
"text": " Lukáš Zátopek (born 2 February 1978) is a Czech ice hockey player currently playing for Chelmsford Chieftains of the English National Ice Hockey League. He began his career in 1998 with HC Vítkovice in the Czech Extraliga, the top level of hockey in the Czech Republic, where he stayed until 2001. In 2001 he moved to Heilbronn Falcons in Germany. He eventually moved to Slovakia, to play for MHC Nitra. In 2008 he moved from Germany to England to play for the Milton Keynes Lightning. in the English Premier Ice Hockey League. During his career he has played for HC Vitkovice, Heilbronn Falcons, HC Prostejov, HC Havirov Panthers, HC Prerov, DHK Latgale and ESC Halle 04 before eventually joining his current club Milton Keynes Lightning.",
"score": "1.510071"
},
{
"id": "28461042",
"title": "Tomáš Bobček",
"text": " Tomáš Bobček (born 8 September 2001) is a Slovak professional footballer who plays for Ružomberok as a forward.",
"score": "1.5085847"
},
{
"id": "14738076",
"title": "Marek Lukáš",
"text": " Marek Lukáš (born 16 July 1991) is a Czech athlete competing in the combined events. He represented his country at three outdoor and one indoor European Championships.",
"score": "1.506577"
},
{
"id": "8133678",
"title": "Libor Hudáček",
"text": " Hudáček participated at the 2008 IIHF World U18 Championships and the 2010 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. He played for Slovakia at the 2012 IIHF World Championship, earning 5 points in 10 games. He won the silver medal at the 2012 World Championship.",
"score": "1.5051149"
}
] | [
"Lukáš Bodeček\n Lukáš Bodeček (born 25 April 1988) is a retired Czech footballer.",
"Lukáš Bodeček\n In the summer 2017, Bodeček moved to TJ Sokol Čížová. He then moved to FK Kosoř. In addition, Bodeček also worked as a fitness coach for various of the youth teams at SK Slavia Prague since the summer 2017. As of 2020, he was still in this position at Slavia.",
"Lukáš Ticháček\n Lukáš Ticháček (born 12 January 1982) is a Czech volleyball player of Polish citizenship, member of the Czech Republic men's national volleyball team, bronze medalist at the 2013 European League. On club level, he plays for Gwardia Wrocław, two–time Czech Champion (2001, 2021), five–time German Champion (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011), three–time Polish Champion (2012, 2013, 2015).",
"Lukáš Bokroš\n Lukáš Bokroš (born September 9, 1982) is a Slovak former professional ice hockey left winger. Bokroš played six games for HC Zlín of the Czech Extraliga during the 2006–07 season. He also played in the Tipsport Liga for HK Dukla Trenčín, HKM Zvolen, MHC Martin and MHK Dubnica as well as in the Ligue Magnus for Ours de Villard-de-Lans. Bokroš played in the 2000 IIHF World U18 Championships for Slovakia.",
"Lukáš Paukovček\n Lukáš Paukovček (born 13 November 1990) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who currently plays professionally in Slovakia for HK Dukla Trenčín of the Slovak Extraliga.",
"Lukas Vejdemo\n Lukas Vejdemo (born 25 January 1996) is a Swedish professional ice hockey forward currently playing for Montreal Canadiens in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a prospect under contract with the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canadiens selected him in the third round (87th overall) of the 2015 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Lukáš Mareček\n Lukáš Mareček (born 17 April 1990) is a Czech footballer who plays for Teplice. He is member of the Czech under-21 team. He represented the team at the 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship.",
"Adam Pecháček\n Adam Pecháček (born 19 February 1995) is a Czech basketball player for Artland Dragons of the ProA and Czech national team. Pecháček spent the 2019-20 season with Phoenix Hagen, averaging 13.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 1.1 assists per game. On 14 October 2020, Pecháček signed with the PS Karlsruhe Lions. He participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"Petr Bohačík\n Petr Bohačík is a professional Czech basketball player playing for BK JIP Pardubice. He was twice honoured to be part of All Star Game (2007 and 2011). He has been a member of the Czech Republic national basketball team, competing in the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, 2009 EuroBasket, and the 2011 EuroBasket. Bohačík started the 2010–11 season strongly, scoring 88 points in his first 8 matches, including 19 points against Svitavy, and being singled out by Czech news agency iDNES.cz as star of the league. He went on to score 15 points for Pardubice in a 70–50 win over Děčín in March 2011. He finished the season being nominated for the All Star Game.",
"Libor Hudáček\n Hudáček began playing junior ice hockey in the HK Spišská Nová Ves. He was a member of the HK Orange 20 project in the 2009–10 season, overall playing 23 games. Rest of the season he played for the HC Slovan Bratislava. In the 2010–11 season he overall played 55 games and earned 24 points for Slovan. In the next season he scored winning goal in the 7th playoffs final game against HC Košice and won the Slovak Extraliga title. After two seasons with HC Bílí Tygři Liberec in the Czech Extraliga (ELH), Hudáček returned to the KHL as a free agent, signing a one-year contract with Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk on 21 May 2020. On February 24, 2021, Hudacek joined Lausanne HC of the National League (NL) on a one-year deal through the end of the 2020/21 season. He hurt his leg in a game against EHC Biel on March 9, 2021 which required surgery, forcing him to sit out the remainder of the season.",
"Lukáš Finsterle\n Lukáš Finsterle (born March 9, 1990) is a Czech professional ice hockey player for HC Bobři Valašské Meziříčí of the 2nd Czech Republic Hockey League. Finsterle played 48 games with HC Zlín in the Czech Extraliga from 2009 to 2012. He also played in the Erste Bank Eishockey Liga for Orli Znojmo and the Tipsport Liga.",
"Ondřej Pavelec\n Pavelec led the Czech Republic under-17 team to a second-place finish in the 2004 Junior World Cup, and the under-18 squad to a fourth-place finish at the U-18 World Junior Cup. He was also the starting goalie for the Czech Republic junior team at the 2006 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Vancouver, Kelowna and Kamloops, British Columbia. Pavelec then played for the senior Czech team at the 2010 World Championships, helping capture a gold medal. He also competed in the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and Sochi, respectively. In between the two Olympic tournaments, he helped lead the Czechs to a bronze medal at the 2011 World Championships.",
"Lukáš Křeček\n Lukáš Křeček (born 18 September 1986 in Kladno) is a Czech football player who currently plays for Vlašim on loan from FC Zbrojovka Brno.",
"Samuel Buček\n Samuel Buček (born 19 December 1998) is a Slovak ice hockey player who plays as a right wing for HK Nitra of the Slovak Extraliga. He represented Slovakia in the IIHF World U20 Championship where they get Eliminated in Quarter-finals and get 8th place, Buček scoring the 3 goals and 4 assist in the tournament.",
"Martin Nečas\n Nečas first played internationally with the Czech U-17 team at the 2015 World U-17 Hockey Challenge, where he served as captain and recorded five points in five games, leading his team in scoring. He again was captain for the Czechs at the 2016 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament, an invitational tournament, where he finished seventh overall in scoring with six points in four games, helping the team win gold. He later made his debut in an International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) tournament at the 2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, where he had three points for the Czechs. He also participated at the 2017 IIHF World U18 Championships, serving as captain of the Czech team, and had three assists in five games as the Czechs lost in the quarter-finals. Nečas led the 2018 World Juniors with 8 assists and tied for the scoring lead (with Casey Mittelstadt of the United States) with 11 points, helping the Czechs to a fourth-place finish. He was again named to the senior team for the 2018 IIHF World Championship, finishing with 5 points in 7 games. The Hurricanes lent Nečas to the 2019 World Juniors, where he served as captain of the Czech team.",
"Jaroslav Borák\n Jaroslav Borák (born 9 November 1989 in Brno) is a Czech football player who currently plays for 1. FC Brno. He started his football career with FC Dosta Bystrc-Kníničky, but has been playing for 1. FC Brno since the age of eight. He joined the first team in January 2008. In the season 2008/09 he has played 89 minutes in 5 matches in Gambrinus liga.",
"Lukáš Zátopek\n Lukáš Zátopek (born 2 February 1978) is a Czech ice hockey player currently playing for Chelmsford Chieftains of the English National Ice Hockey League. He began his career in 1998 with HC Vítkovice in the Czech Extraliga, the top level of hockey in the Czech Republic, where he stayed until 2001. In 2001 he moved to Heilbronn Falcons in Germany. He eventually moved to Slovakia, to play for MHC Nitra. In 2008 he moved from Germany to England to play for the Milton Keynes Lightning. in the English Premier Ice Hockey League. During his career he has played for HC Vitkovice, Heilbronn Falcons, HC Prostejov, HC Havirov Panthers, HC Prerov, DHK Latgale and ESC Halle 04 before eventually joining his current club Milton Keynes Lightning.",
"Tomáš Bobček\n Tomáš Bobček (born 8 September 2001) is a Slovak professional footballer who plays for Ružomberok as a forward.",
"Marek Lukáš\n Marek Lukáš (born 16 July 1991) is a Czech athlete competing in the combined events. He represented his country at three outdoor and one indoor European Championships.",
"Libor Hudáček\n Hudáček participated at the 2008 IIHF World U18 Championships and the 2010 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. He played for Slovakia at the 2012 IIHF World Championship, earning 5 points in 10 games. He won the silver medal at the 2012 World Championship."
] |
What sport does Ebrahim Asadi play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ebrahim Asadi | 3,979,080 | 83 | [
{
"id": "506073",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": "Assist Goals Last Update 18 September 2010 ",
"score": "1.8901727"
},
{
"id": "506072",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": " Ebrahim Asadi (, born June 8, 1979) is a retired Iranian footballer who played for Persepolis.",
"score": "1.8152472"
},
{
"id": "30703231",
"title": "Mansour Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " He began playing football in 1973 in Sepahan. Then he played for Isfahan XI between 1974 and 1975.",
"score": "1.6836963"
},
{
"id": "8566241",
"title": "Ebrahim Fathi",
"text": " Ebrahim Fathi oregani (born September 21, 1982) is an Iranian wushu athlete. Ebrahim Fathi with his two teammates of Iran Duilian group, Mohsen Ahmadi and Navid Makvandi, have attended several world championship events and introduced Iran as the first contender of this sub-division in Wushu world.",
"score": "1.6733192"
},
{
"id": "26991956",
"title": "Omid Ebrahimi",
"text": " Omid Ebrahimi was discovered by Amir Ghalenoei in 2011. He started his career in Esteghlal Dargahan. He joined Sepahan in 2010 after spending the previous season at Shahrdari Bandar Abbas in the Azadegan League. Ebrahimi's first competitive appearance came in the Iran Pro League match against Rah Ahan on 27 July 2010, where he played the full 90 minutes. On 10 June 2014, Ebrahimi signed a two-year contract with Esteghlal. He spent an excellent career in Blues of the Capital and selected as the best midfielder of Persian Gulf Pro League in 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons and also became the best goalscorer among midfielders in the history of Esteghlal.",
"score": "1.6568904"
},
{
"id": "6052925",
"title": "Hossein Ebrahimi",
"text": " Hossein Ebrahimi (, born August 3, 1990 in Astaneh) is an Iranian footballer who currently plays for Iranian club Foolad of the Persian Gulf Pro League as a Midfielder.",
"score": "1.6491582"
},
{
"id": "6052929",
"title": "Hossein Ebrahimi",
"text": "Iran ; WAFF Championship: 2008 ",
"score": "1.6443844"
},
{
"id": "29867997",
"title": "Masoud Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Masoud Ebrahimzadeh is an Iranian professional football player who plays as a Left Back for Zob Ahan in the Persian Gulf pro league.۱۲۳",
"score": "1.6424658"
},
{
"id": "7383898",
"title": "Abolfazl Ebrahimi",
"text": " Abolfazl Ebrahimi ; is an Iranian football midfielder who currently plays for the Iranian football club Paykan in the Iran Pro League.",
"score": "1.6340315"
},
{
"id": "7268589",
"title": "Ebrahim Javadi",
"text": " Ebrahim Javadipour (, born 28 July 1943) is a retired Iranian freestyle wrestler. He won a world title in 1969, 1970, 1971 and 1973 and a gold medal at the Asian Games in 1970 and 1974, but placed third at the 1972 Olympics. He is listed in the FILA wrestling hall of fame. Javadi was born in Qazvin, but spent a few of his early years in Tehran, where his father worked for the Ministry of Labor. Javadi was an active child and tried various sports, eventually choosing wrestling because it fitted best to his relatively small body size.",
"score": "1.6331925"
},
{
"id": "8566242",
"title": "Ebrahim Fathi",
"text": " Ebrahim Fathi started his wushu career at the age of 12. he has won numerous titles of the Duilian in World and Asian Championships including Macau, Canada, Turkey, Indonesia and Malaysia. he was a member of Iran national wushu team that won Asian gold medal at the Asian Championship in Macau for the first time in the history of Iran Taolu Wushu.",
"score": "1.6278408"
},
{
"id": "48305",
"title": "Sardar Azmoun",
"text": " According to Sardar, he was first introduced to the sport when he started to kick balls on a family trip in Turkmenistan when he was 9. He began his career at Oghab Gonbad of Gonbad-e Kavus. He also played volleyball and was invited to Iran's national under-15 volleyball team. After some years, he joined Shamoushak Gorgan, before joining Etka Gorgan, who were playing in Division 1 in Iran at the time.",
"score": "1.6268512"
},
{
"id": "5887840",
"title": "Ebrahim Loveinian",
"text": " Played with Sepahan for three seasons and then joined Aboumoslem for one season.",
"score": "1.6260741"
},
{
"id": "4382174",
"title": "Mahmood Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Ebrahimzadeh is one of the most famous footballers to come from Bushehr, he started his football career with Shahin Bushehr. He then played for Iranian club FC Aboomoslem during 1975/76 season where he scored 11 goals, and was captain of Zobahan F.C. in 1976/77 season. In the 1980s, he played in Germany for four years most notably for VfL Wolfsburg. He made his debut for Iran national football team on November 18, 1977 against Hong Kong as a substitute, during a 1978 FIFA World Cup qualification.",
"score": "1.617749"
},
{
"id": "10248968",
"title": "Saeid Ebrahimi",
"text": " Saeid Ebrahimi (, born 22 December 1982 in Nahavand) is an Iranian wrestler. He competed in the freestyle heavyweight division the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, reaching the quarter finals.",
"score": "1.6147959"
},
{
"id": "506074",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": "Persepolis ; Iranian Football League (2) : 1999–2000, 2001–02 ",
"score": "1.6095023"
},
{
"id": "4439714",
"title": "Ebrahim Ghasempour",
"text": " After playing for Sanat Naft for three years, he left the club in 1976 and joined Shahbaz reaching the third place in the Iranian league in 1976–77 with that club as one of the key players. He signed a two-year contract with Pas in 1978. He played for different clubs in Iranian, Emirati, Qatari and Egyptian leagues for 16 years. He returned to Pas in 1994 and retired in 1996.",
"score": "1.6077104"
},
{
"id": "27571765",
"title": "Mohammad Ebrahimi (footballer, born 1984)",
"text": " Mohammad Ebrahimi (born 1 November 1986) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a forward for Pars Jonoubi in the Persian Gulf Pro League",
"score": "1.6019595"
},
{
"id": "14961613",
"title": "Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh (, born 3 January 1980 in Saarbrücken) is Iranian-German tennis player who competed for the Iran Davis Cup team in 2008. Currently, he is the coach of Cedrik-Marcel Stebe and Natalia Vikhlyantseva. He was the coach of Angelique Kerber between 2012 and February 2015.",
"score": "1.5991409"
},
{
"id": "9855702",
"title": "Ebrahim Sadeghi",
"text": " Ebrahim Sadeghi (, born February 4, 1979 in Karaj, Iran) is an Iranian football coach and retired player who played for Saipa for 17 years. Sadeghi has been playing for Saipa since 2000. In 2010, Saipa Cultural and Athletic Corporation celebrated a testimonial ceremony for him because of \"his loyalty to the club\", calling him The Orange Loyal. He was also gifted a Saipa Tiba. On 13 December 2015, in a match against Esteghlal Ahvaz Sadeghi played his 400th league match for the club, becoming the only player in the history of the Persian Gulf Pro League to reach this feat. He retired on 4 May 2017 after playing 17 seasons at Saipa at the top flight.",
"score": "1.5958791"
}
] | [
"Ebrahim Asadi\nAssist Goals Last Update 18 September 2010 ",
"Ebrahim Asadi\n Ebrahim Asadi (, born June 8, 1979) is a retired Iranian footballer who played for Persepolis.",
"Mansour Ebrahimzadeh\n He began playing football in 1973 in Sepahan. Then he played for Isfahan XI between 1974 and 1975.",
"Ebrahim Fathi\n Ebrahim Fathi oregani (born September 21, 1982) is an Iranian wushu athlete. Ebrahim Fathi with his two teammates of Iran Duilian group, Mohsen Ahmadi and Navid Makvandi, have attended several world championship events and introduced Iran as the first contender of this sub-division in Wushu world.",
"Omid Ebrahimi\n Omid Ebrahimi was discovered by Amir Ghalenoei in 2011. He started his career in Esteghlal Dargahan. He joined Sepahan in 2010 after spending the previous season at Shahrdari Bandar Abbas in the Azadegan League. Ebrahimi's first competitive appearance came in the Iran Pro League match against Rah Ahan on 27 July 2010, where he played the full 90 minutes. On 10 June 2014, Ebrahimi signed a two-year contract with Esteghlal. He spent an excellent career in Blues of the Capital and selected as the best midfielder of Persian Gulf Pro League in 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons and also became the best goalscorer among midfielders in the history of Esteghlal.",
"Hossein Ebrahimi\n Hossein Ebrahimi (, born August 3, 1990 in Astaneh) is an Iranian footballer who currently plays for Iranian club Foolad of the Persian Gulf Pro League as a Midfielder.",
"Hossein Ebrahimi\nIran ; WAFF Championship: 2008 ",
"Masoud Ebrahimzadeh\n Masoud Ebrahimzadeh is an Iranian professional football player who plays as a Left Back for Zob Ahan in the Persian Gulf pro league.۱۲۳",
"Abolfazl Ebrahimi\n Abolfazl Ebrahimi ; is an Iranian football midfielder who currently plays for the Iranian football club Paykan in the Iran Pro League.",
"Ebrahim Javadi\n Ebrahim Javadipour (, born 28 July 1943) is a retired Iranian freestyle wrestler. He won a world title in 1969, 1970, 1971 and 1973 and a gold medal at the Asian Games in 1970 and 1974, but placed third at the 1972 Olympics. He is listed in the FILA wrestling hall of fame. Javadi was born in Qazvin, but spent a few of his early years in Tehran, where his father worked for the Ministry of Labor. Javadi was an active child and tried various sports, eventually choosing wrestling because it fitted best to his relatively small body size.",
"Ebrahim Fathi\n Ebrahim Fathi started his wushu career at the age of 12. he has won numerous titles of the Duilian in World and Asian Championships including Macau, Canada, Turkey, Indonesia and Malaysia. he was a member of Iran national wushu team that won Asian gold medal at the Asian Championship in Macau for the first time in the history of Iran Taolu Wushu.",
"Sardar Azmoun\n According to Sardar, he was first introduced to the sport when he started to kick balls on a family trip in Turkmenistan when he was 9. He began his career at Oghab Gonbad of Gonbad-e Kavus. He also played volleyball and was invited to Iran's national under-15 volleyball team. After some years, he joined Shamoushak Gorgan, before joining Etka Gorgan, who were playing in Division 1 in Iran at the time.",
"Ebrahim Loveinian\n Played with Sepahan for three seasons and then joined Aboumoslem for one season.",
"Mahmood Ebrahimzadeh\n Ebrahimzadeh is one of the most famous footballers to come from Bushehr, he started his football career with Shahin Bushehr. He then played for Iranian club FC Aboomoslem during 1975/76 season where he scored 11 goals, and was captain of Zobahan F.C. in 1976/77 season. In the 1980s, he played in Germany for four years most notably for VfL Wolfsburg. He made his debut for Iran national football team on November 18, 1977 against Hong Kong as a substitute, during a 1978 FIFA World Cup qualification.",
"Saeid Ebrahimi\n Saeid Ebrahimi (, born 22 December 1982 in Nahavand) is an Iranian wrestler. He competed in the freestyle heavyweight division the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, reaching the quarter finals.",
"Ebrahim Asadi\nPersepolis ; Iranian Football League (2) : 1999–2000, 2001–02 ",
"Ebrahim Ghasempour\n After playing for Sanat Naft for three years, he left the club in 1976 and joined Shahbaz reaching the third place in the Iranian league in 1976–77 with that club as one of the key players. He signed a two-year contract with Pas in 1978. He played for different clubs in Iranian, Emirati, Qatari and Egyptian leagues for 16 years. He returned to Pas in 1994 and retired in 1996.",
"Mohammad Ebrahimi (footballer, born 1984)\n Mohammad Ebrahimi (born 1 November 1986) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a forward for Pars Jonoubi in the Persian Gulf Pro League",
"Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh\n Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh (, born 3 January 1980 in Saarbrücken) is Iranian-German tennis player who competed for the Iran Davis Cup team in 2008. Currently, he is the coach of Cedrik-Marcel Stebe and Natalia Vikhlyantseva. He was the coach of Angelique Kerber between 2012 and February 2015.",
"Ebrahim Sadeghi\n Ebrahim Sadeghi (, born February 4, 1979 in Karaj, Iran) is an Iranian football coach and retired player who played for Saipa for 17 years. Sadeghi has been playing for Saipa since 2000. In 2010, Saipa Cultural and Athletic Corporation celebrated a testimonial ceremony for him because of \"his loyalty to the club\", calling him The Orange Loyal. He was also gifted a Saipa Tiba. On 13 December 2015, in a match against Esteghlal Ahvaz Sadeghi played his 400th league match for the club, becoming the only player in the history of the Persian Gulf Pro League to reach this feat. He retired on 4 May 2017 after playing 17 seasons at Saipa at the top flight."
] |
What sport does Jeannot Gilbert play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Jeannot Gilbert | 2,730,662 | 55 | [
{
"id": "30680834",
"title": "Jean Gilbert Bayaram",
"text": " Jean Gilbert Bayaram (born July 7, 1974) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Pamplemousses SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"score": "1.8670251"
},
{
"id": "31745084",
"title": "Wally Gilbert",
"text": " Walter John Gilbert (December 19, 1900 – September 7, 1958) was an American athlete who performed in professional baseball, football and basketball. Over his career, Gilbert played in Major League Baseball from 1928 to 1932 as a third baseman with the Brooklyn Robins and the Cincinnati Reds. In addition, he played in the National Football League from 1923 to 1926 for the Duluth Kelleys/Eskimos, as well as for the Buffalo Germans, Denver Tigers and Two Harbors All-Stars basketball squads.",
"score": "1.7523537"
},
{
"id": "3210350",
"title": "David Gilbert (ice hockey)",
"text": " Gilbert played four seasons (2007-2011) of major junior hockey in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) where he scored 70 goals and 86 assists for 156 points in 209 games played. In 2009 Gilbert was selected to play in the CHL Top Prospects Game. Gilbert made his professional debut in the American Hockey League with the Rockford IceHogs during the 2009–10 season. On May 31, 2011, the Chicago Blackhawks signed Gilbert to a three-year entry-level contract. On August 19, 2014, the Orlando Solar Bears of the ECHL announced that they had signed Gilbert as an unrestricted free agent. After attending AHL affiliate, the Toronto Marlies training camp, Gilbert was traded prior to the 2014–15 season, by the Solar Bears to the Wheeling Nailers on October 16, 2014. A free agent following the 2015–16 season with the Kalamazoo Wings, Gilbert signed abroad in France, agreeing to a one-year deal with Boxers de Bordeaux of the Magnus on July 18, 2016.",
"score": "1.7441382"
},
{
"id": "1015734",
"title": "Matt Gilbert",
"text": " Matthew Ian Gilbert (born 9 October 1985) is an English rugby union footballer currently playing at Flanker and number eight for Cinderford. He previously played for Hartpury University, Bath and Worcester Warriors. As well as Llanelli Scarlets in the Pro 14 and European Cup. He is the only deaf professional sportsman in England. Mat has worn hearing aids Since he was a child, and now wears Phonak aids. He works as a celebrity ambassador for Phonak, as well as an ambassador for the charity, Action on Hearing Loss helping to raise awareness of hearing loss. He has played 11 times for the England Deaf rugby team - www.englanddeafrugby.com",
"score": "1.7391055"
},
{
"id": "475959",
"title": "Gilbert Benausse",
"text": " Gilbert Benausse (born 21 January 1932 in Carcassonne – died 24 November 2006 in Carcassonne) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s. He played at the international level for France, and at club level for AS Carcassonne, Lézignan Sangliers and Toulouse Olympique, playing at, or , i.e. number 3 or 5, 6, or 7.",
"score": "1.738725"
},
{
"id": "4483244",
"title": "Tanner Jeannot",
"text": " Jeannot played major junior hockey for the Moose Jaw Warriors in the Western Hockey League and was signed by the Nashville Predators as an undrafted free agent to a three-year entry-level contract in April 2018. In the 2020–21 season, Jeannot made his NHL debut appearing in a fourth-line role for the Predators in a 4–2 defeat against the Carolina Hurricanes on March 2, 2021.",
"score": "1.7264843"
},
{
"id": "24899261",
"title": "Jean-Pascal Mignot",
"text": " Jean-Pascal Mignot (born 26 February 1981) is a French former professional footballer who played as defender. He made the international sporting headlines on 21 October 2010 when he was the first player in the history of the UEFA Champions League to be sent-off without ever actually taking to the field. The incident occurred during a group stage match against AFC Ajax at the Amsterdam Arena. Mignot was warming up on the touchline during the closing moments of the game, and strongly remonstrated against a decision made by the referee, Olegario Benquerenca. The official strode across to Mignot and produced a yellow card, followed swiftly by a red card, after Mignot had continued to speak out of turn.",
"score": "1.7177763"
},
{
"id": "32854",
"title": "Craig Gilbert",
"text": " When he was at the United States Military Academy, he played for their handball team. He claimed the College Nationals twice. At West Point, he also played football and basketball. In 1978, he was elected in the national team. At the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, he and the team reached the 9th ranking. He played one game against Denmark.",
"score": "1.7092564"
},
{
"id": "4483243",
"title": "Tanner Jeannot",
"text": " Tanner Jeannot (born May 29, 1997) is a Canadian professional ice hockey forward currently playing for the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League (NHL). His hometown is Oxbow, Saskatchewan.",
"score": "1.7036301"
},
{
"id": "11248744",
"title": "Benjamin Jeannot",
"text": " Benjamin Jeannot (born 22 January 1992) is a French professional footballer who plays for Stade Malherbe Caen on loan from Dijon. He plays as a striker and is a French youth international having starred for his nation at under-16, under-17, and under-18 level. With the under-17 team, Jeannot played at the 2009 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship in Germany.",
"score": "1.7005757"
},
{
"id": "475962",
"title": "Gilbert Benausse",
"text": " Gilbert Benausse played in AS Carcassonne's 1951–52 and 1952–53 French Rugby League Championship victories, and 1954–55 French Rugby League Championship defeat, and FC Lezignan's 1960–61 and 1962–63 French Rugby League Championship victories, and 1958–59 French Rugby League Championship defeat.",
"score": "1.6860607"
},
{
"id": "3210349",
"title": "David Gilbert (ice hockey)",
"text": " David Gilbert (born February 9, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player who is currently under contract to Dragons de Rouen of the French Ligue Magnus. He previously played with the Rockford IceHogs of the American Hockey League (AHL). Gilbert was selected by the Chicago Blackhawks in the 7th round (209th overall) of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.6805264"
},
{
"id": "14408946",
"title": "Rod Gilbert",
"text": " Rodrigue Gabriel Gilbert (July 1, 1941August 19, 2021) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played his entire career for the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League (NHL). Known as \"Mr. Ranger\", he played right wing on the GAG line (Goal-A-Game line) with Vic Hadfield and Jean Ratelle. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1982, and was the first player in Rangers history to have his number retired. After his playing career, he became president of the Rangers' alumni association.",
"score": "1.6800735"
},
{
"id": "4213976",
"title": "Skip Gilbert",
"text": " After retiring from playing, Gilbert worked in the publishing and sports marketing career fields. He was an account executive at Tennis Magazine, ADWEEK and Ziff-Davis before spending nine years in sales at Sporting News, part of that as the National Sales Manager. On July 24, 1997, he moved to the United States Soccer Federation where he was the Vice President of Sales. In June 1998, he became the Chief Marketing Officer at USA Swimming. In July 2001, Gilbert became the Vice President-Sponsorship Sales for the Arena Football League. In July 2003, he was hired as the New York Sales Manager for Outside Magazine. On March 4, 2005, he became the CEO of USA Triathlon, the U.S. national governing body for the sport. On August 30, 2010 USA Triathlon announced Skip's departure as CEO. After leaving USAT, Gilbert consulted for Times-7 Sport, a New Zealand-based sport timing company. In June 2011, Gilbert was hired as Chief Business Officer at PSA, an events firm in Reston, VA. In July 2012, he joined the United States Tennis Association as Managing Director, Professional Tennis Operations & US Open Tournament Manager.",
"score": "1.6791058"
},
{
"id": "9612013",
"title": "Gilbert Brunat",
"text": " After his start at Union sportive in Iseaux, Brunat began playing for SO Chambéry. His talent was discovered and he was selected for the France national rugby union team. After playing one season with FC Aix-les-Bains, Brunat began playing for FC Grenoble in 1986, where he lasted for seven years.",
"score": "1.6750877"
},
{
"id": "13364105",
"title": "Alterique Gilbert",
"text": " Gilbert played basketball for Miller Grove High School near Lithonia. As a sophomore, he averaged 18.0 points, 3.7 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 4.1 steals, leading his team to a 28–5 record. As a junior, he averaged 18.5 points, 4.7 rebounds, 6.2 assists and 5.3 steals, leading his team to a 27–4 record. As a senior, he averaged 20.1 points, 5.8 assists, 5.5 rebounds and 4.3 steals, leading his team to a 31–3 record and the Class 5A state championship, his third state title in four years at Miller Grove. He helped his team reach the semifinals at High School Nationals despite sleeping one hour before the previous game. Gilbert was named Georgia Gatorade Player of the Year and Mr. Georgia Basketball. He was selected to play in the McDonald's All-American Game and Jordan Brand Classic. He left the Jordan Brand Classic early on April 15, 2016 after dislocating his left shoulder. In May, he underwent surgery on his shoulder. A four-star recruit and one of the best point guards in the 2016 class by the end of high school, Gilbert committed to UConn on July 4, 2015 over Louisville, Illinois, Syracuse and Texas.",
"score": "1.6735733"
},
{
"id": "4213974",
"title": "Skip Gilbert",
"text": " Francis \"Skip\" Gilbert is a retired U.S. soccer player. He was a two-time NCAA Division I First-Team All-American goalkeeper and played one season in the North American Soccer League. His business career includes roles in executive management, sales and sales management, marketing and event operations. He held these roles with companies such as the United States Tennis Association, USA Triathlon, USA Swimming, US Soccer, the Arena Football League and the Sporting News.",
"score": "1.6719763"
},
{
"id": "30683005",
"title": "Jeannot Lamarque",
"text": " Jeannot Lamarque (born January 4, 1982) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Curepipe Starlight SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"score": "1.6596206"
},
{
"id": "13049974",
"title": "Gilbert Verdié",
"text": " Gilbert Verdié, then playing in Albi, was called upon to compete in the first edition of the 1954 Rugby League World Cup which took place in France. He participated in two edition meetings including the final against England on 13 November 1954 at the Parc des Princes in Paris in front of 30,368 spectators but could not prevent England from raising their first World Cup title.",
"score": "1.6572988"
},
{
"id": "31708342",
"title": "Gilbert Jean-Baptiste",
"text": " Born in Haiti, Jean-Baptiste grew up in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In 1995, he moved to the United States to attend Mercer County Community College where he played a single season of college soccer. He was a 1995 NJCAA First Team All American. Jean-Baptiste transferred to Southern Connecticut State University for the next three seasons. In 1998, his senior season, the Owls won the NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship and Jean-Baptiste was a First Team Division II All American and the NCAA Division II Player of the Year. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in computer science.",
"score": "1.6564249"
}
] | [
"Jean Gilbert Bayaram\n Jean Gilbert Bayaram (born July 7, 1974) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Pamplemousses SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"Wally Gilbert\n Walter John Gilbert (December 19, 1900 – September 7, 1958) was an American athlete who performed in professional baseball, football and basketball. Over his career, Gilbert played in Major League Baseball from 1928 to 1932 as a third baseman with the Brooklyn Robins and the Cincinnati Reds. In addition, he played in the National Football League from 1923 to 1926 for the Duluth Kelleys/Eskimos, as well as for the Buffalo Germans, Denver Tigers and Two Harbors All-Stars basketball squads.",
"David Gilbert (ice hockey)\n Gilbert played four seasons (2007-2011) of major junior hockey in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) where he scored 70 goals and 86 assists for 156 points in 209 games played. In 2009 Gilbert was selected to play in the CHL Top Prospects Game. Gilbert made his professional debut in the American Hockey League with the Rockford IceHogs during the 2009–10 season. On May 31, 2011, the Chicago Blackhawks signed Gilbert to a three-year entry-level contract. On August 19, 2014, the Orlando Solar Bears of the ECHL announced that they had signed Gilbert as an unrestricted free agent. After attending AHL affiliate, the Toronto Marlies training camp, Gilbert was traded prior to the 2014–15 season, by the Solar Bears to the Wheeling Nailers on October 16, 2014. A free agent following the 2015–16 season with the Kalamazoo Wings, Gilbert signed abroad in France, agreeing to a one-year deal with Boxers de Bordeaux of the Magnus on July 18, 2016.",
"Matt Gilbert\n Matthew Ian Gilbert (born 9 October 1985) is an English rugby union footballer currently playing at Flanker and number eight for Cinderford. He previously played for Hartpury University, Bath and Worcester Warriors. As well as Llanelli Scarlets in the Pro 14 and European Cup. He is the only deaf professional sportsman in England. Mat has worn hearing aids Since he was a child, and now wears Phonak aids. He works as a celebrity ambassador for Phonak, as well as an ambassador for the charity, Action on Hearing Loss helping to raise awareness of hearing loss. He has played 11 times for the England Deaf rugby team - www.englanddeafrugby.com",
"Gilbert Benausse\n Gilbert Benausse (born 21 January 1932 in Carcassonne – died 24 November 2006 in Carcassonne) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s. He played at the international level for France, and at club level for AS Carcassonne, Lézignan Sangliers and Toulouse Olympique, playing at, or , i.e. number 3 or 5, 6, or 7.",
"Tanner Jeannot\n Jeannot played major junior hockey for the Moose Jaw Warriors in the Western Hockey League and was signed by the Nashville Predators as an undrafted free agent to a three-year entry-level contract in April 2018. In the 2020–21 season, Jeannot made his NHL debut appearing in a fourth-line role for the Predators in a 4–2 defeat against the Carolina Hurricanes on March 2, 2021.",
"Jean-Pascal Mignot\n Jean-Pascal Mignot (born 26 February 1981) is a French former professional footballer who played as defender. He made the international sporting headlines on 21 October 2010 when he was the first player in the history of the UEFA Champions League to be sent-off without ever actually taking to the field. The incident occurred during a group stage match against AFC Ajax at the Amsterdam Arena. Mignot was warming up on the touchline during the closing moments of the game, and strongly remonstrated against a decision made by the referee, Olegario Benquerenca. The official strode across to Mignot and produced a yellow card, followed swiftly by a red card, after Mignot had continued to speak out of turn.",
"Craig Gilbert\n When he was at the United States Military Academy, he played for their handball team. He claimed the College Nationals twice. At West Point, he also played football and basketball. In 1978, he was elected in the national team. At the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, he and the team reached the 9th ranking. He played one game against Denmark.",
"Tanner Jeannot\n Tanner Jeannot (born May 29, 1997) is a Canadian professional ice hockey forward currently playing for the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League (NHL). His hometown is Oxbow, Saskatchewan.",
"Benjamin Jeannot\n Benjamin Jeannot (born 22 January 1992) is a French professional footballer who plays for Stade Malherbe Caen on loan from Dijon. He plays as a striker and is a French youth international having starred for his nation at under-16, under-17, and under-18 level. With the under-17 team, Jeannot played at the 2009 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship in Germany.",
"Gilbert Benausse\n Gilbert Benausse played in AS Carcassonne's 1951–52 and 1952–53 French Rugby League Championship victories, and 1954–55 French Rugby League Championship defeat, and FC Lezignan's 1960–61 and 1962–63 French Rugby League Championship victories, and 1958–59 French Rugby League Championship defeat.",
"David Gilbert (ice hockey)\n David Gilbert (born February 9, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player who is currently under contract to Dragons de Rouen of the French Ligue Magnus. He previously played with the Rockford IceHogs of the American Hockey League (AHL). Gilbert was selected by the Chicago Blackhawks in the 7th round (209th overall) of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Rod Gilbert\n Rodrigue Gabriel Gilbert (July 1, 1941August 19, 2021) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played his entire career for the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League (NHL). Known as \"Mr. Ranger\", he played right wing on the GAG line (Goal-A-Game line) with Vic Hadfield and Jean Ratelle. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1982, and was the first player in Rangers history to have his number retired. After his playing career, he became president of the Rangers' alumni association.",
"Skip Gilbert\n After retiring from playing, Gilbert worked in the publishing and sports marketing career fields. He was an account executive at Tennis Magazine, ADWEEK and Ziff-Davis before spending nine years in sales at Sporting News, part of that as the National Sales Manager. On July 24, 1997, he moved to the United States Soccer Federation where he was the Vice President of Sales. In June 1998, he became the Chief Marketing Officer at USA Swimming. In July 2001, Gilbert became the Vice President-Sponsorship Sales for the Arena Football League. In July 2003, he was hired as the New York Sales Manager for Outside Magazine. On March 4, 2005, he became the CEO of USA Triathlon, the U.S. national governing body for the sport. On August 30, 2010 USA Triathlon announced Skip's departure as CEO. After leaving USAT, Gilbert consulted for Times-7 Sport, a New Zealand-based sport timing company. In June 2011, Gilbert was hired as Chief Business Officer at PSA, an events firm in Reston, VA. In July 2012, he joined the United States Tennis Association as Managing Director, Professional Tennis Operations & US Open Tournament Manager.",
"Gilbert Brunat\n After his start at Union sportive in Iseaux, Brunat began playing for SO Chambéry. His talent was discovered and he was selected for the France national rugby union team. After playing one season with FC Aix-les-Bains, Brunat began playing for FC Grenoble in 1986, where he lasted for seven years.",
"Alterique Gilbert\n Gilbert played basketball for Miller Grove High School near Lithonia. As a sophomore, he averaged 18.0 points, 3.7 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 4.1 steals, leading his team to a 28–5 record. As a junior, he averaged 18.5 points, 4.7 rebounds, 6.2 assists and 5.3 steals, leading his team to a 27–4 record. As a senior, he averaged 20.1 points, 5.8 assists, 5.5 rebounds and 4.3 steals, leading his team to a 31–3 record and the Class 5A state championship, his third state title in four years at Miller Grove. He helped his team reach the semifinals at High School Nationals despite sleeping one hour before the previous game. Gilbert was named Georgia Gatorade Player of the Year and Mr. Georgia Basketball. He was selected to play in the McDonald's All-American Game and Jordan Brand Classic. He left the Jordan Brand Classic early on April 15, 2016 after dislocating his left shoulder. In May, he underwent surgery on his shoulder. A four-star recruit and one of the best point guards in the 2016 class by the end of high school, Gilbert committed to UConn on July 4, 2015 over Louisville, Illinois, Syracuse and Texas.",
"Skip Gilbert\n Francis \"Skip\" Gilbert is a retired U.S. soccer player. He was a two-time NCAA Division I First-Team All-American goalkeeper and played one season in the North American Soccer League. His business career includes roles in executive management, sales and sales management, marketing and event operations. He held these roles with companies such as the United States Tennis Association, USA Triathlon, USA Swimming, US Soccer, the Arena Football League and the Sporting News.",
"Jeannot Lamarque\n Jeannot Lamarque (born January 4, 1982) is a Mauritian football player who currently plays for Curepipe Starlight SC in the Mauritian Premier League and for the Mauritius national football team as a midfielder. He is featured on the Mauritian national team in the official 2010 FIFA World Cup video game.",
"Gilbert Verdié\n Gilbert Verdié, then playing in Albi, was called upon to compete in the first edition of the 1954 Rugby League World Cup which took place in France. He participated in two edition meetings including the final against England on 13 November 1954 at the Parc des Princes in Paris in front of 30,368 spectators but could not prevent England from raising their first World Cup title.",
"Gilbert Jean-Baptiste\n Born in Haiti, Jean-Baptiste grew up in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In 1995, he moved to the United States to attend Mercer County Community College where he played a single season of college soccer. He was a 1995 NJCAA First Team All American. Jean-Baptiste transferred to Southern Connecticut State University for the next three seasons. In 1998, his senior season, the Owls won the NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship and Jean-Baptiste was a First Team Division II All American and the NCAA Division II Player of the Year. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in computer science."
] |
What sport does Roland Repiský play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Roland Repiský | 5,623,957 | 20 | [
{
"id": "29597038",
"title": "Roland Repiský",
"text": " Roland Repiský (born 30 May 1990) is a Slovak football goalkeeper who currently plays for the Slovak Corgoň Liga club MFK Košice.",
"score": "1.68983"
},
{
"id": "2559255",
"title": "Martin Repiský",
"text": " Repiský began his senior career with Pohronie competing in the Slovak top division, after returning from a loan spell in the youth teams of Slovan Bratislava. He moved to replace departing Czech goalkeeper Matěj Luksch as a back-up goalkeeper to Tomáš Jenčo. Repiský made his Fortuna Liga debut in the premier round of the 2020–21 season, in an away fixture at ViOn Aréna against ViOn Zlaté Moravce, being preferred over Jenčo due to his shoulder injury. Repiský had a bad start to the match, conceding two goals in three minutes from Martin Kovaľ and Tomáš Ďubek. Pohronie however moved to equalise the game in the second half through late goals by Alieu Fadera and a free-kick goal by James Weir.",
"score": "1.500485"
},
{
"id": "12973028",
"title": "Michal Řepík",
"text": " Řepík competed for the Czech Republic's under-20 team at the 2007 World Junior Championships in Sweden. He failed to register a point in six games as the Czechs were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Sweden. Poised to make a second appearance at the World Junior Championships in 2008 in his home country, Řepík was unable to participate due to a concussion suffered in the month preceding the tournament.",
"score": "1.4889165"
},
{
"id": "25628293",
"title": "Martina Repiská",
"text": " Martina Repiská (born 21 October 1995) is a Slovak badminton player. She started playing badminton at the age of nine in her hometown, then playing competitively in the junior international tournament when she was twelve. She became the member of the national team in 2009, and won her first international title at the 2017 Morocco International tournament. Repiská competed at the 2019 European Games.",
"score": "1.4528627"
},
{
"id": "12973021",
"title": "Michal Řepík",
"text": " Prior to his professional career, Repik played major junior in the Western Hockey League (WHL). He spent three seasons with the Vancouver Giants, helping the team to a Presidents' Cup as WHL champions in 2006 and a Memorial Cup as Canadian Hockey League (CHL) champions in 2007. During the Giants' 2007 playoff season, he led the WHL and Memorial Cup tournaments in scoring. Selected 40th overall in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft by the Panthers, Repik turned professional in 2008–09 with the team's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate.",
"score": "1.4376823"
},
{
"id": "28066711",
"title": "Gaël Clichy",
"text": " Gaël Dimitri Clichy (born 26 July 1985) is a French professional footballer who plays for Swiss Super League club Servette and formerly for the France national team. He primarily plays as a left-back, being also capable of playing as an offensive-minded wing-back. He is predominantly left footed, but naturally right footed. Earlier in his career, he was described as a player who possesses \"almost unrivaled stamina\" that is \"quick in the tackle and willing to drive forward\". Clichy was born in the city of Toulouse and began his football career playing for a host of amateur clubs in the Haute-Garonne département such as JS Cugnaux, AS Muret, and Tournefeuille. In 2001, he ",
"score": "1.4215211"
},
{
"id": "28274420",
"title": "Rastislav Revúcky",
"text": " Rastislav Revúcky (born 17 May 1978) is a former Slovakian para table tennis player who has won four European titles in his career along with Ján Riapoš in team events.",
"score": "1.410554"
},
{
"id": "12973025",
"title": "Michal Řepík",
"text": " Řepík was assigned by the Panthers to the Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League (AHL) for his first professional season in 2008–09. Called up from Rochester in December, he scored his first NHL goal in his NHL debut on 8 December 2008, in a 4–3 overtime victory over the Ottawa Senators. He played in 5 games total for the Panthers during the season, tallying 2 goals. With the Americans, he recorded 49 points in 75 games. In 2009–10, Repik saw increased time with the Panthers, appearing in 19 NHL games with 3 goals and 2 assists during that time. Spending the majority of the season with the Americans, he had 22 goals and 31 assists over 60 games. He struggled to score in the 2010 AHL playoffs, however, recording ",
"score": "1.4054828"
},
{
"id": "2559254",
"title": "Martin Repiský",
"text": " Martin Repiský (born 4 November 2000) is a Slovak football goalkeeper who currently plays for Slavoj Trebišov, on loan from Pohronie.",
"score": "1.4035612"
},
{
"id": "975523",
"title": "RC Roland",
"text": " RC Roland (РК Роланд) is a Ukrainian rugby club in Ivano-Frankivsk. The club is named after the Roland Battalion, a Ukrainian subunit of the German Abwehr during World War II. They are one of the four teams comprising the additional group in the Ukraine Rugby Superliga.",
"score": "1.4024956"
},
{
"id": "26924055",
"title": "Roland Suniula",
"text": " Ohio Aviators in the inaugural season of PRO Rugby USA. On April 17, 2016, he scored the first try for Ohio against the Denver Stampede. During the 2016–17 season, Roland played for Ohio's Columbus Rugby Club, as well as a coach for the Tiger Rugby Academy. In September 2017, Roland played with Misfits Rugby in Colorado's Aspen Ruggerfest. He also played for Rugby Reggio in Emilia, Italy in the Italian Eccellenza League for the 2018 season. In 2018, Roland played with his brother Andrew for Austin Elite and in 2019, he currently plays with his brother Shalom for the Seattle Seawolves in the MLR.",
"score": "1.4003882"
},
{
"id": "12973022",
"title": "Michal Řepík",
"text": " After being selected 25th overall by the Vancouver Giants in the 2005 Canadian Hockey League (CHL) Import Draft, Řepík moved from Slovakia to join the team in 2005–06. He scored 24 goals and 52 points over 69 games, ranking fifth among league rookies in scoring. He added 3 goals and 6 points over 14 playoff games, helping the Giants win the Presidents' Cup as WHL champions. Their win qualified them for the 2006 Memorial Cup, where they were eliminated in the semifinal. The following season, Repik scored at a near-point-per-game pace with 55 points over 56 games. During the 2007 WHL playoffs, he scored 26 points over 22 games ",
"score": "1.3944455"
},
{
"id": "26924052",
"title": "Roland Suniula",
"text": " Roland Suniula (born December 17, 1986) is an American international rugby union player who plays for the Austin Elite as a centre in Major League Rugby (MLR). He previously played for the Seattle Seawolves in the MLR and the Ohio Aviators as a centre in PRO Rugby. He is the brother of Andrew and Shalom Suniula, who have also represented the United States Eagles rugby union (both sevens and XV's).",
"score": "1.3737599"
},
{
"id": "7850094",
"title": "Jordan Roland",
"text": " Roland played for Westhill Senior High School in Syracuse, New York. As a junior, he averaged 23.9 points, 4.7 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.6 steals per game, leading his team to a 27–0 record and New York public school and federation Class B state titles. Roland scored 41 points in the state public school final. He was named New York Class B Player of the Year and All-Central New York Player of the Year. In his senior season, Roland averaged 21.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game, helping his team repeat as New York public school and federation Class B state champions. He was named Class B Player of the Year and All-Central New York Player of the Year for a second straight season. Roland competed for Syracuse Select on the Amateur Athletic Union circuit and ran track for Westhill. He was considered a two-star recruit by 247Sports and ESPN. On July 14, 2014, after his junior season in high school, he committed to play college basketball for George Washington.",
"score": "1.3707485"
},
{
"id": "15716646",
"title": "Roland Szolnoki",
"text": " Roland Szolnoki (born 21 January 1992) is a Hungarian football player who plays as a right back for Puskás Akadémia FC and Hungary national team. A versatile international footballer, he has play for both foots. He normally plays as a defender, but he can sometimes play as a deep-lying playmaker. He started his football career with Videoton and scored his first senior goal against Kecskemét, on 26 May 2013.",
"score": "1.3703669"
},
{
"id": "12257400",
"title": "Patrick Franziska",
"text": " Patrick Franziska (born 11 June 1992) is a German table tennis player. He is currently sponsored by Butterfly and plays with FC Saarbrücken-TT in the German Bundesliga (TTBL).",
"score": "1.3681606"
},
{
"id": "12973020",
"title": "Michal Řepík",
"text": " Michal Řepík (born 31 December 1988) is a Czech professional ice hockey left winger. He is currently under contract with HC Sparta Praha of the Czech Extraliga (ELH). Repik was selected by the Florida Panthers in the 2nd round (40th overall) of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.3679347"
},
{
"id": "13643523",
"title": "Mathis Bolly",
"text": " Mathis Gazoa Kippersund Bolly (born 14 November 1990) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for Eliteserien club Stabæk, on loan from Molde. Bolly made his professional debut for the Norwegian top flight side Lillestrøm. He represented Norway at youth international level, but chose to represent Ivory Coast national.",
"score": "1.3652518"
},
{
"id": "4648059",
"title": "Sebastian Repo",
"text": " Repo participated in multiple junior selection squad's for Finland at the International level. Repo was eventually selected to participate in his first tournament at the 2016 World Junior Championships. In playing for the host country, Repo recorded 1 assist in 7 games, featuring in the final victory against Russia to help Finland claim the gold medal.",
"score": "1.348242"
},
{
"id": "14243457",
"title": "Jason Repko",
"text": " Jason Edward Repko (born December 27, 1980) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Minnesota Twins and Boston Red Sox.",
"score": "1.3441408"
}
] | [
"Roland Repiský\n Roland Repiský (born 30 May 1990) is a Slovak football goalkeeper who currently plays for the Slovak Corgoň Liga club MFK Košice.",
"Martin Repiský\n Repiský began his senior career with Pohronie competing in the Slovak top division, after returning from a loan spell in the youth teams of Slovan Bratislava. He moved to replace departing Czech goalkeeper Matěj Luksch as a back-up goalkeeper to Tomáš Jenčo. Repiský made his Fortuna Liga debut in the premier round of the 2020–21 season, in an away fixture at ViOn Aréna against ViOn Zlaté Moravce, being preferred over Jenčo due to his shoulder injury. Repiský had a bad start to the match, conceding two goals in three minutes from Martin Kovaľ and Tomáš Ďubek. Pohronie however moved to equalise the game in the second half through late goals by Alieu Fadera and a free-kick goal by James Weir.",
"Michal Řepík\n Řepík competed for the Czech Republic's under-20 team at the 2007 World Junior Championships in Sweden. He failed to register a point in six games as the Czechs were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Sweden. Poised to make a second appearance at the World Junior Championships in 2008 in his home country, Řepík was unable to participate due to a concussion suffered in the month preceding the tournament.",
"Martina Repiská\n Martina Repiská (born 21 October 1995) is a Slovak badminton player. She started playing badminton at the age of nine in her hometown, then playing competitively in the junior international tournament when she was twelve. She became the member of the national team in 2009, and won her first international title at the 2017 Morocco International tournament. Repiská competed at the 2019 European Games.",
"Michal Řepík\n Prior to his professional career, Repik played major junior in the Western Hockey League (WHL). He spent three seasons with the Vancouver Giants, helping the team to a Presidents' Cup as WHL champions in 2006 and a Memorial Cup as Canadian Hockey League (CHL) champions in 2007. During the Giants' 2007 playoff season, he led the WHL and Memorial Cup tournaments in scoring. Selected 40th overall in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft by the Panthers, Repik turned professional in 2008–09 with the team's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate.",
"Gaël Clichy\n Gaël Dimitri Clichy (born 26 July 1985) is a French professional footballer who plays for Swiss Super League club Servette and formerly for the France national team. He primarily plays as a left-back, being also capable of playing as an offensive-minded wing-back. He is predominantly left footed, but naturally right footed. Earlier in his career, he was described as a player who possesses \"almost unrivaled stamina\" that is \"quick in the tackle and willing to drive forward\". Clichy was born in the city of Toulouse and began his football career playing for a host of amateur clubs in the Haute-Garonne département such as JS Cugnaux, AS Muret, and Tournefeuille. In 2001, he ",
"Rastislav Revúcky\n Rastislav Revúcky (born 17 May 1978) is a former Slovakian para table tennis player who has won four European titles in his career along with Ján Riapoš in team events.",
"Michal Řepík\n Řepík was assigned by the Panthers to the Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League (AHL) for his first professional season in 2008–09. Called up from Rochester in December, he scored his first NHL goal in his NHL debut on 8 December 2008, in a 4–3 overtime victory over the Ottawa Senators. He played in 5 games total for the Panthers during the season, tallying 2 goals. With the Americans, he recorded 49 points in 75 games. In 2009–10, Repik saw increased time with the Panthers, appearing in 19 NHL games with 3 goals and 2 assists during that time. Spending the majority of the season with the Americans, he had 22 goals and 31 assists over 60 games. He struggled to score in the 2010 AHL playoffs, however, recording ",
"Martin Repiský\n Martin Repiský (born 4 November 2000) is a Slovak football goalkeeper who currently plays for Slavoj Trebišov, on loan from Pohronie.",
"RC Roland\n RC Roland (РК Роланд) is a Ukrainian rugby club in Ivano-Frankivsk. The club is named after the Roland Battalion, a Ukrainian subunit of the German Abwehr during World War II. They are one of the four teams comprising the additional group in the Ukraine Rugby Superliga.",
"Roland Suniula\n Ohio Aviators in the inaugural season of PRO Rugby USA. On April 17, 2016, he scored the first try for Ohio against the Denver Stampede. During the 2016–17 season, Roland played for Ohio's Columbus Rugby Club, as well as a coach for the Tiger Rugby Academy. In September 2017, Roland played with Misfits Rugby in Colorado's Aspen Ruggerfest. He also played for Rugby Reggio in Emilia, Italy in the Italian Eccellenza League for the 2018 season. In 2018, Roland played with his brother Andrew for Austin Elite and in 2019, he currently plays with his brother Shalom for the Seattle Seawolves in the MLR.",
"Michal Řepík\n After being selected 25th overall by the Vancouver Giants in the 2005 Canadian Hockey League (CHL) Import Draft, Řepík moved from Slovakia to join the team in 2005–06. He scored 24 goals and 52 points over 69 games, ranking fifth among league rookies in scoring. He added 3 goals and 6 points over 14 playoff games, helping the Giants win the Presidents' Cup as WHL champions. Their win qualified them for the 2006 Memorial Cup, where they were eliminated in the semifinal. The following season, Repik scored at a near-point-per-game pace with 55 points over 56 games. During the 2007 WHL playoffs, he scored 26 points over 22 games ",
"Roland Suniula\n Roland Suniula (born December 17, 1986) is an American international rugby union player who plays for the Austin Elite as a centre in Major League Rugby (MLR). He previously played for the Seattle Seawolves in the MLR and the Ohio Aviators as a centre in PRO Rugby. He is the brother of Andrew and Shalom Suniula, who have also represented the United States Eagles rugby union (both sevens and XV's).",
"Jordan Roland\n Roland played for Westhill Senior High School in Syracuse, New York. As a junior, he averaged 23.9 points, 4.7 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.6 steals per game, leading his team to a 27–0 record and New York public school and federation Class B state titles. Roland scored 41 points in the state public school final. He was named New York Class B Player of the Year and All-Central New York Player of the Year. In his senior season, Roland averaged 21.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game, helping his team repeat as New York public school and federation Class B state champions. He was named Class B Player of the Year and All-Central New York Player of the Year for a second straight season. Roland competed for Syracuse Select on the Amateur Athletic Union circuit and ran track for Westhill. He was considered a two-star recruit by 247Sports and ESPN. On July 14, 2014, after his junior season in high school, he committed to play college basketball for George Washington.",
"Roland Szolnoki\n Roland Szolnoki (born 21 January 1992) is a Hungarian football player who plays as a right back for Puskás Akadémia FC and Hungary national team. A versatile international footballer, he has play for both foots. He normally plays as a defender, but he can sometimes play as a deep-lying playmaker. He started his football career with Videoton and scored his first senior goal against Kecskemét, on 26 May 2013.",
"Patrick Franziska\n Patrick Franziska (born 11 June 1992) is a German table tennis player. He is currently sponsored by Butterfly and plays with FC Saarbrücken-TT in the German Bundesliga (TTBL).",
"Michal Řepík\n Michal Řepík (born 31 December 1988) is a Czech professional ice hockey left winger. He is currently under contract with HC Sparta Praha of the Czech Extraliga (ELH). Repik was selected by the Florida Panthers in the 2nd round (40th overall) of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Mathis Bolly\n Mathis Gazoa Kippersund Bolly (born 14 November 1990) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for Eliteserien club Stabæk, on loan from Molde. Bolly made his professional debut for the Norwegian top flight side Lillestrøm. He represented Norway at youth international level, but chose to represent Ivory Coast national.",
"Sebastian Repo\n Repo participated in multiple junior selection squad's for Finland at the International level. Repo was eventually selected to participate in his first tournament at the 2016 World Junior Championships. In playing for the host country, Repo recorded 1 assist in 7 games, featuring in the final victory against Russia to help Finland claim the gold medal.",
"Jason Repko\n Jason Edward Repko (born December 27, 1980) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Minnesota Twins and Boston Red Sox."
] |
What sport does Nigel Marples play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Nigel Marples | 5,290,313 | 71 | [
{
"id": "15056068",
"title": "Nigel Marples",
"text": " Nigel Marples (born November 3, 1985) is a Canadian football player and coach.",
"score": "2.0246615"
},
{
"id": "15056072",
"title": "Nigel Marples",
"text": " After his return in summer 2013 to Canada, was named as Head coach of the Roman Tulis European Soccer School of Excellence. Since October 2013 works besides his coaching career by the Roman Tulis Soccer School, as Player-Coach of the BC Premier Soccer League side Fusion FC in Richmond. Marples studied Masters in Coaching Education over distance learning on the Ohio University. He is currently the Head Soccer Coach at the Principia School (2017).",
"score": "1.9102418"
},
{
"id": "15056069",
"title": "Nigel Marples",
"text": " Marples attended North Delta High School and played college soccer at Towson University, where he was a four-year starter and two year captain. During his college years he also played with the Abbotsford Rangers in the USL Premier Development League.",
"score": "1.9072268"
},
{
"id": "15056070",
"title": "Nigel Marples",
"text": " Marples joined the professional ranks after graduation with the Vancouver Whitecaps of USL First Division, but only appeared in 2 matches and was released. He then turned to indoor soccer after being drafted by the Philadelphia KiXX. He appeared in 27 games before moving back outdoors with USL Second Division Harrisburg City Islanders, and then on to the Charleston Battery in 2009. Marples joined HB Køge from the Danish 1st Division on 9 August 2012. He left the club in summer 2013 and returned to Vancouver.",
"score": "1.8940611"
},
{
"id": "15056071",
"title": "Nigel Marples",
"text": " Marples has also spent time in the Canadian U-20 player pool, but has yet to be capped.",
"score": "1.8396499"
},
{
"id": "5103294",
"title": "Simon Marples",
"text": " Simon Marples (born 30 July 1975 in Sheffield) is an English former football defender. Marples was on the books of Sheffield Wednesday and Rotherham United as a youngster. He then joined non-league side Stocksbridge Park Steels in 1994, working his way into the first team after impressive performances in the reserves. In 1999 Marples moved to Doncaster Rovers for £12,000, which remains a club record fee received for a Stocksbridge player. Marples impressed so much in his early weeks at the club that he attracted interest from Premier League clubs, with Rovers valuing him at more than £200,000. Maples stayed with Rovers and was part of the teams that won the Football Conference playoffs and the Division 3 championship in successive seasons from 2003 to 2004. He signed for Chester in the summer of 2006 on a free transfer and over the next two years would again fail to find the net in more than 50 first–team appearances. In March 2008 he was placed on 'gardening leave' at Chester, believed to be following a dispute over his non-selection in the team. He did not play for the club again and was released at the end of the season.",
"score": "1.8181217"
},
{
"id": "7458304",
"title": "Nigel Wilson",
"text": " Nigel Edward Wilson (born January 12, 1970) is a Canadian former Major League Baseball player from Oshawa, Ontario. He played for the Florida Marlins, Cincinnati Reds, and Cleveland Indians. He also spent six highly successful seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball with the Nippon Ham Fighters and Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes. He now owns a sports training facility in Ajax, Ontario. Training today’s youth to hit dingers the way he use to. Nigel has become a Canadian icon to his friends and family and a true ambassador to the sport.",
"score": "1.6908424"
},
{
"id": "14426460",
"title": "Marples",
"text": "Brian John Marples (1907–1997), British and New Zealand zoologist ; Chris Marples (footballer) (born 1964), former English footballer and first-class cricketer ; David R. Marples, Canadian historian ; Ernest Marples PC (1907–1978), British Conservative politician, Postmaster General and Minister of Transport ; Fred Marples (1885–1945), Canadian sports executive in ice hockey and athletics ; George Marples (1883–1947), English cricketer ; Nigel Marples (born 1985), Canadian soccer player ; Simon Marples (born 1975), English soccer player ; Stan Marples, professional ice hockey player ; William Marples & Sons, English tool-maker Marples may refer to: ",
"score": "1.6770949"
},
{
"id": "14163344",
"title": "George Marples",
"text": " George Holmes Marples (30 May 1883 — 30 December 1947) was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Derbyshire in 1905. Marples was born in Attercliffe, Sheffield. He made two first-class appearances for Derbyshire in the 1905 season, his debut against the touring Australians when he took a wicket. In his second match, a week later against Marylebone Cricket Club, MCC won by an innings and 252 runs. Marples was a left-arm medium-fast bowler who took one wicket in his career at an average of 116.00 and a tailend batsman who scored 11 runs in 4 innings in 2 first-class matches. Marples died in Chesterfield at the age of 64.",
"score": "1.6017269"
},
{
"id": "6530645",
"title": "Nigel Heslop",
"text": " Nigel John Heslop (born 4 December 1963) is an English former rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s and 1990s. He played representative level rugby union (RU) for England, and at club level for Orrell R.U.F.C. (two spells), and Liverpool St Helens F.C. as a Wing, and club level rugby league (RL) for Oldham (Heritage № 1004), at the time of his move to Oldham, he was employed by Merseyside Police. There were also rumours of Nigel being employed as a waiter in the notorious hooters bar in the US shortly after retirement, although this has never been confirmed his wife was seen leaving the premises and upon interview told reporters she was ″extremely proud of Nige and will support him anywhere his heart takes him″.",
"score": "1.5918198"
},
{
"id": "12223690",
"title": "Nigel Briers",
"text": " Education: Lutterworth Grammar School & Borough Road College He was both the Director of Cricket and Director of Sport at Marlborough College. He was then Director of Sport and Director of Cricket at St Paul's School, Barnes- before his retirement in July 2021.",
"score": "1.5912817"
},
{
"id": "7836406",
"title": "Nigel Clutton",
"text": " Nigel Clutton (born 12 February 1954) is an English former footballer who played as a forward. He made a professional appearance for his hometown club, Chester. Clutton was a prolific striker playing Saturday and Sunday League football for Chester-based sides Blacon YC, Crusaders, Reliance and the Union Vaults and working as a milkman when he was given his solitary Football League outing for Chester on 1 March 1978 at home to Carlisle United. Clutton was given his chance due to injuries to Ian Edwards and Ian Howat and he lined up in attack alongside new signing Ian Mellor Nigel still lives in Chester with his wife, Helen and cat, Teddy. .",
"score": "1.5672092"
},
{
"id": "28682654",
"title": "Stan Marple",
"text": " Stanislaus Henry Marple is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and coach. Marple played twelve seasons in various British leagues, most notably for the Guildford Flames, for whom he later served as head coach. He is currently the general manager for the University of Alberta's men's hockey team, the Alberta Golden Bears.",
"score": "1.5599335"
},
{
"id": "26481133",
"title": "Tom Bertram",
"text": " Tom Quesenbery Bertram (born 24 May 1977 in Ashford, Middlesex) is an English field hockey player. Bertram played in two Summer Olympics for Great Britain in 2000 and 2004. Bertram, nicknamed Bertie and/or Stroker, has played club hockey for Bournville, Stourport and Reading. He made his English international debut in a friendly against Argentina in 1999. He was educated at Millfield School in Somerset. By profession Bertram is a doctor, and his international career was at times interrupted by his medical studies. He studied medicine at Birmingham University and graduated in 2000.",
"score": "1.5538452"
},
{
"id": "9030373",
"title": "Nigel Starmer-Smith",
"text": " Starmer-Smith played scrum-half for Oxford University (as a student at University College, Oxford) before progressing to senior club, Harlequins. He retired in 1975-76. During the 1966-67 season, while still at Oxford he was selected to play for British rugby's foremost invitational team the Barbarians. In 1969 he was selected to play for England against a touring South Africa side. In the late 1960s he taught geography at Epsom College.",
"score": "1.5517526"
},
{
"id": "9254981",
"title": "Nigel Coultas",
"text": " Nigel Coultas is a paralympic athlete from Great Britain competing mainly in category TS4 sprint events. Nigel competed in the 1988 and 1992 Summer Paralympics as part of the Great Britain team. At the 1988 games he won gold in the 100m, 200m and high jump breaking the world record in the high jump, he also won a silver medal in the 400m behind Finland's Harri Jauhianihen. At the 1992 Summer Paralympics he finished second in the 100m, 200m and 400m and was part of the Great Britain team that was disqualified in the 4 × 100 m.",
"score": "1.5497258"
},
{
"id": "15173477",
"title": "Stan Marples",
"text": " Stanley Gibson \"Stan\" Marples (November 16, 1891 – January 27, 1928) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played in various professional and amateur leagues, including the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. Amongst the teams he played with were the Portland Rosebuds and Victoria Aristocrats. Marples was also part of the 1915 Winnipeg Monarchs team which captured the Allan Cup as Canadian amateur champions by defeating the Melville Millionaires 4 goals to 2. He was the brother of Fred Marples, president of the Winnipeg Monarchs. He died in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, where he lived in his last years, in 1928. He was buried at Moose Jaw after a funeral attended by the representatives from the Manitoba and Canadian Hockey Associations.",
"score": "1.5386071"
},
{
"id": "5072389",
"title": "David Marques",
"text": " Marques came to note as a rugby player when he represented Cambridge University, playing in four Varsity Matches. He later played for the Army, but it was his eleven years spent with Harlequins that he was best known. In 1956 he was selected to play for invitational tourists the Barbarians, playing against the 1958 Australians and then travelled with the Barbarians on their tours to Canada and East Africa. 1956 was also the year in which Marques was first selected to play for the England national team, facing Wales as part of the 1956 Five Nations Championship. Marques played a total of 23 matches for ",
"score": "1.5371718"
},
{
"id": "7179894",
"title": "Nigel",
"text": "Nigel Ah Wong (born 1990), New Zealand rugby player ; Nigel Ayers (born 1957), English multimedia artist ; Nigel Barker (photographer) (born 1972), English fashion photographer ; Nigel Benn (born 1964), British boxer ; Nigel Bennett (born 1949), Anglo-Canadian actor, director, and writer ; Nigel Benson (born 1955), British writer and illustrator ; Nigel Blackwell, English lead singer and guitarist of Half Man Half Biscuit ; Nigel Bond (born 1965), British snooker player ; Nigel Bonner (1928-1994), British zoologist and Antarctic marine mammal specialist ; Nigel Bruce (1895–1953), British actor ; Nigel Clough (born 1966), British footballer ; Nigel Cullen (1917–1941), Australian ",
"score": "1.5315902"
},
{
"id": "32060560",
"title": "Nigel Aspinall",
"text": " Nigel Aspinall (born 1946) is a croquet player from England. Aspinall was one of the most successful croquet players in the 1970s and 1980s, winning the President's Cup eleven times (1969, 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984 and 1985), the Open Championship eight times (1969, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1983 and 1984) and the Men's Championship twice (1973 and 1983). Aspinall represented Great Britain in four MacRobertson Shield tournaments, winning on two occasions. In 2007, Aspinall was inducted into the World Croquet Federation Hall of Fame.",
"score": "1.5292568"
}
] | [
"Nigel Marples\n Nigel Marples (born November 3, 1985) is a Canadian football player and coach.",
"Nigel Marples\n After his return in summer 2013 to Canada, was named as Head coach of the Roman Tulis European Soccer School of Excellence. Since October 2013 works besides his coaching career by the Roman Tulis Soccer School, as Player-Coach of the BC Premier Soccer League side Fusion FC in Richmond. Marples studied Masters in Coaching Education over distance learning on the Ohio University. He is currently the Head Soccer Coach at the Principia School (2017).",
"Nigel Marples\n Marples attended North Delta High School and played college soccer at Towson University, where he was a four-year starter and two year captain. During his college years he also played with the Abbotsford Rangers in the USL Premier Development League.",
"Nigel Marples\n Marples joined the professional ranks after graduation with the Vancouver Whitecaps of USL First Division, but only appeared in 2 matches and was released. He then turned to indoor soccer after being drafted by the Philadelphia KiXX. He appeared in 27 games before moving back outdoors with USL Second Division Harrisburg City Islanders, and then on to the Charleston Battery in 2009. Marples joined HB Køge from the Danish 1st Division on 9 August 2012. He left the club in summer 2013 and returned to Vancouver.",
"Nigel Marples\n Marples has also spent time in the Canadian U-20 player pool, but has yet to be capped.",
"Simon Marples\n Simon Marples (born 30 July 1975 in Sheffield) is an English former football defender. Marples was on the books of Sheffield Wednesday and Rotherham United as a youngster. He then joined non-league side Stocksbridge Park Steels in 1994, working his way into the first team after impressive performances in the reserves. In 1999 Marples moved to Doncaster Rovers for £12,000, which remains a club record fee received for a Stocksbridge player. Marples impressed so much in his early weeks at the club that he attracted interest from Premier League clubs, with Rovers valuing him at more than £200,000. Maples stayed with Rovers and was part of the teams that won the Football Conference playoffs and the Division 3 championship in successive seasons from 2003 to 2004. He signed for Chester in the summer of 2006 on a free transfer and over the next two years would again fail to find the net in more than 50 first–team appearances. In March 2008 he was placed on 'gardening leave' at Chester, believed to be following a dispute over his non-selection in the team. He did not play for the club again and was released at the end of the season.",
"Nigel Wilson\n Nigel Edward Wilson (born January 12, 1970) is a Canadian former Major League Baseball player from Oshawa, Ontario. He played for the Florida Marlins, Cincinnati Reds, and Cleveland Indians. He also spent six highly successful seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball with the Nippon Ham Fighters and Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes. He now owns a sports training facility in Ajax, Ontario. Training today’s youth to hit dingers the way he use to. Nigel has become a Canadian icon to his friends and family and a true ambassador to the sport.",
"Marples\nBrian John Marples (1907–1997), British and New Zealand zoologist ; Chris Marples (footballer) (born 1964), former English footballer and first-class cricketer ; David R. Marples, Canadian historian ; Ernest Marples PC (1907–1978), British Conservative politician, Postmaster General and Minister of Transport ; Fred Marples (1885–1945), Canadian sports executive in ice hockey and athletics ; George Marples (1883–1947), English cricketer ; Nigel Marples (born 1985), Canadian soccer player ; Simon Marples (born 1975), English soccer player ; Stan Marples, professional ice hockey player ; William Marples & Sons, English tool-maker Marples may refer to: ",
"George Marples\n George Holmes Marples (30 May 1883 — 30 December 1947) was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Derbyshire in 1905. Marples was born in Attercliffe, Sheffield. He made two first-class appearances for Derbyshire in the 1905 season, his debut against the touring Australians when he took a wicket. In his second match, a week later against Marylebone Cricket Club, MCC won by an innings and 252 runs. Marples was a left-arm medium-fast bowler who took one wicket in his career at an average of 116.00 and a tailend batsman who scored 11 runs in 4 innings in 2 first-class matches. Marples died in Chesterfield at the age of 64.",
"Nigel Heslop\n Nigel John Heslop (born 4 December 1963) is an English former rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s and 1990s. He played representative level rugby union (RU) for England, and at club level for Orrell R.U.F.C. (two spells), and Liverpool St Helens F.C. as a Wing, and club level rugby league (RL) for Oldham (Heritage № 1004), at the time of his move to Oldham, he was employed by Merseyside Police. There were also rumours of Nigel being employed as a waiter in the notorious hooters bar in the US shortly after retirement, although this has never been confirmed his wife was seen leaving the premises and upon interview told reporters she was ″extremely proud of Nige and will support him anywhere his heart takes him″.",
"Nigel Briers\n Education: Lutterworth Grammar School & Borough Road College He was both the Director of Cricket and Director of Sport at Marlborough College. He was then Director of Sport and Director of Cricket at St Paul's School, Barnes- before his retirement in July 2021.",
"Nigel Clutton\n Nigel Clutton (born 12 February 1954) is an English former footballer who played as a forward. He made a professional appearance for his hometown club, Chester. Clutton was a prolific striker playing Saturday and Sunday League football for Chester-based sides Blacon YC, Crusaders, Reliance and the Union Vaults and working as a milkman when he was given his solitary Football League outing for Chester on 1 March 1978 at home to Carlisle United. Clutton was given his chance due to injuries to Ian Edwards and Ian Howat and he lined up in attack alongside new signing Ian Mellor Nigel still lives in Chester with his wife, Helen and cat, Teddy. .",
"Stan Marple\n Stanislaus Henry Marple is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and coach. Marple played twelve seasons in various British leagues, most notably for the Guildford Flames, for whom he later served as head coach. He is currently the general manager for the University of Alberta's men's hockey team, the Alberta Golden Bears.",
"Tom Bertram\n Tom Quesenbery Bertram (born 24 May 1977 in Ashford, Middlesex) is an English field hockey player. Bertram played in two Summer Olympics for Great Britain in 2000 and 2004. Bertram, nicknamed Bertie and/or Stroker, has played club hockey for Bournville, Stourport and Reading. He made his English international debut in a friendly against Argentina in 1999. He was educated at Millfield School in Somerset. By profession Bertram is a doctor, and his international career was at times interrupted by his medical studies. He studied medicine at Birmingham University and graduated in 2000.",
"Nigel Starmer-Smith\n Starmer-Smith played scrum-half for Oxford University (as a student at University College, Oxford) before progressing to senior club, Harlequins. He retired in 1975-76. During the 1966-67 season, while still at Oxford he was selected to play for British rugby's foremost invitational team the Barbarians. In 1969 he was selected to play for England against a touring South Africa side. In the late 1960s he taught geography at Epsom College.",
"Nigel Coultas\n Nigel Coultas is a paralympic athlete from Great Britain competing mainly in category TS4 sprint events. Nigel competed in the 1988 and 1992 Summer Paralympics as part of the Great Britain team. At the 1988 games he won gold in the 100m, 200m and high jump breaking the world record in the high jump, he also won a silver medal in the 400m behind Finland's Harri Jauhianihen. At the 1992 Summer Paralympics he finished second in the 100m, 200m and 400m and was part of the Great Britain team that was disqualified in the 4 × 100 m.",
"Stan Marples\n Stanley Gibson \"Stan\" Marples (November 16, 1891 – January 27, 1928) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played in various professional and amateur leagues, including the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. Amongst the teams he played with were the Portland Rosebuds and Victoria Aristocrats. Marples was also part of the 1915 Winnipeg Monarchs team which captured the Allan Cup as Canadian amateur champions by defeating the Melville Millionaires 4 goals to 2. He was the brother of Fred Marples, president of the Winnipeg Monarchs. He died in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, where he lived in his last years, in 1928. He was buried at Moose Jaw after a funeral attended by the representatives from the Manitoba and Canadian Hockey Associations.",
"David Marques\n Marques came to note as a rugby player when he represented Cambridge University, playing in four Varsity Matches. He later played for the Army, but it was his eleven years spent with Harlequins that he was best known. In 1956 he was selected to play for invitational tourists the Barbarians, playing against the 1958 Australians and then travelled with the Barbarians on their tours to Canada and East Africa. 1956 was also the year in which Marques was first selected to play for the England national team, facing Wales as part of the 1956 Five Nations Championship. Marques played a total of 23 matches for ",
"Nigel\nNigel Ah Wong (born 1990), New Zealand rugby player ; Nigel Ayers (born 1957), English multimedia artist ; Nigel Barker (photographer) (born 1972), English fashion photographer ; Nigel Benn (born 1964), British boxer ; Nigel Bennett (born 1949), Anglo-Canadian actor, director, and writer ; Nigel Benson (born 1955), British writer and illustrator ; Nigel Blackwell, English lead singer and guitarist of Half Man Half Biscuit ; Nigel Bond (born 1965), British snooker player ; Nigel Bonner (1928-1994), British zoologist and Antarctic marine mammal specialist ; Nigel Bruce (1895–1953), British actor ; Nigel Clough (born 1966), British footballer ; Nigel Cullen (1917–1941), Australian ",
"Nigel Aspinall\n Nigel Aspinall (born 1946) is a croquet player from England. Aspinall was one of the most successful croquet players in the 1970s and 1980s, winning the President's Cup eleven times (1969, 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984 and 1985), the Open Championship eight times (1969, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1983 and 1984) and the Men's Championship twice (1973 and 1983). Aspinall represented Great Britain in four MacRobertson Shield tournaments, winning on two occasions. In 2007, Aspinall was inducted into the World Croquet Federation Hall of Fame."
] |
What sport does Marc Santo-Roman play? | [
"chess",
"International Chess",
"Modern European Chess",
"Western Chess",
"chess game"
] | sport | Marc Santo-Roman | 1,027,847 | 50 | [
{
"id": "27194084",
"title": "Marc Santo-Roman",
"text": " Marc Santo-Roman (born 13 September 1960) is a French chess grandmaster, born in Toulouse.",
"score": "1.7569692"
},
{
"id": "27194086",
"title": "Marc Santo-Roman",
"text": " According to Chessmetrics, at his peak in October 1991 Santo-Roman's play was equivalent to a rating of 2557, and he was ranked number 317 in the world. His best single performance was at FRA-ch Angers, 1990, where he scored 11 of 14 possible points (79%) against 2462-rated opposition, for a performance rating of 2644. On the April 2009 FIDE list his Elo rating is 2392.",
"score": "1.6436017"
},
{
"id": "27194085",
"title": "Marc Santo-Roman",
"text": " He won three French Chess Championship at Angers 1990, Montpellier 1991, and Chambéry 1994 and played for France in the 29th Chess Olympiad at Novi Sad 1990, 30th Chess Olympiad at Manila 1992 and in the 31st Chess Olympiad at Moscow 1994. Santo-Roman was awarded the International Master title in 1984 and the Grandmaster title in 1996.",
"score": "1.6177703"
},
{
"id": "25331787",
"title": "Marc Verica",
"text": " In 2011, Marc signed with the Cougars de Saint-Ouen l'Aumône, France. The Cougars play in the highest level of competition in France (Division 1).",
"score": "1.6085954"
},
{
"id": "25544130",
"title": "Rico Roman",
"text": " In 2012 he joined Dallas Stars which he helped by winning the USA Hockey Sled Classic Division A Championship. From 2011 till now he serves on the United States National Sled Hockey Team and was a winner of the 2013 USA Hockey Sled Cup. In November 2011 he became a silver medal recipient at the IPC World Sledge Hockey Challenge and next year won gold at the same place, following by another silver in 2013. In 2012 he was awarded with a gold medal by winning the International Paralympic Committee Ice Sledge Hockey World Championship and next year won a silver one at the same place. Prior to sled hockey he was quoted saying: \"They asked me to come out and play sled hockey, and I was like, I don't come from a hockey state. I'm from Oregon. We don't play hockey there. How many Hispanics do you see playing hockey?\" In 2014 he got another gold medal, this time at Sochi Paralympics.",
"score": "1.5359702"
},
{
"id": "27958996",
"title": "Marc Minguell",
"text": " Marc Minguell Alférez (born 14 January 1985 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo player who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in three consecutive Summer Olympics (2008 Beijing, 2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season.",
"score": "1.4957774"
},
{
"id": "8328693",
"title": "Marc Martí (basketball)",
"text": " Martí played for the Spanish men's national team on the 2016 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, winning gold medal. Also a member of the team on the 2017 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship.",
"score": "1.4909277"
},
{
"id": "26066795",
"title": "Jean-Marc Pansa",
"text": " Jean-Marc Pansa (born 20 August 1997) is a French professional basketball player for Antibes Sharks of the LNB Pro B. Standing at 2.08 m (6 ft 10 in), Pansa plays as center.",
"score": "1.4769864"
},
{
"id": "29430190",
"title": "Eric Bachier Román",
"text": " Bachier showed interest in sports since childhood, particularly baseball. As he grew up, he played Class A and Double-A baseball. Bachier was also a member of the National Junior Team of Puerto Rico. He was also a gold and silver medalist at the Intercollegiate Games (Justas LAI).",
"score": "1.4769521"
},
{
"id": "4399864",
"title": "Zac Santo",
"text": " Santo played for the Mount Pritchard Mounties in the NSW Cup. In September, Santo was named at fullback in the 2016 Intrust Super Premiership NSW Team of the Year. Santo was a member of The Mounties side which lost in The NSW Cup Grand Final to Illawarra 21-20",
"score": "1.4676615"
},
{
"id": "4399861",
"title": "Zac Santo",
"text": " In 2011, Santo joined the North Queensland Cowboys NYC squad on a trial and train contract and represented the Queensland under 18s team. That year he played in the Cowboys' 2011 NYC Grand Final defeat by the New Zealand Warriors. At the end of 2012, Santo won the Cowboys' NYC Player of the Year award. In 2013, Santo played for the Queensland under 20s team. He finished his NYC career at the end of 2013 with 65 games, scoring 49 tries. On 5 August 2013, Santo re-signed with the Cowboys on a 2-year contract and joined the Cowboys first grade squad in 2014.",
"score": "1.4613762"
},
{
"id": "25544128",
"title": "Rico Roman",
"text": " Rico Roman (born February 4, 1981) is an American gold medal ice sled hockey player and Purple Heart recipient from Portland, Oregon who competed in 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, Russia.",
"score": "1.4590971"
},
{
"id": "31554795",
"title": "Nick Dal Santo",
"text": " lost star midfielder Lenny Hayes to a knee ligament problem and the captain, Luke Ball, was also struggling with injury. In Hayes' absence Dal Santo began to cop a heavy tag from opposition teams each week and this lessened his impact on the game. He still performed strongly for the year, however, and continued to be one of St Kilda's best players. In 2007, under new coach Ross Lyon, Dal Santo played some match-winning football, notching up 16 Brownlow votes for the year. He also played his 100th consecutive game in Round 20 of 2007, which meant that he had ",
"score": "1.4585595"
},
{
"id": "13759568",
"title": "Marc Trasolini",
"text": " Marc Christian Trasolini (born June 21, 1990) is a Canadian professional basketball player for the Ibaraki Robots in Japan. He played college basketball for Santa Clara. Trasolini signed with the Ibaraki Robots on June 25, 2020.",
"score": "1.453155"
},
{
"id": "3638106",
"title": "Marc Dorion",
"text": " Marc Dorion (born June 22, 1987) is a Canadian ice sledge hockey player. He was born with spina bifida, which meant he could not use his legs. He began to play ice sledge hockey when he was 4, at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, and has continued in the sport ever since. He won gold at the 2006 Paralympics when he was 19, and was the team's youngest member. He has played for the Canadian national team since he was 16.",
"score": "1.451299"
},
{
"id": "25544129",
"title": "Rico Roman",
"text": " Roman, who is of Mexican American descent, graduated from Alpha High School in 2000 and joined United States Army soon after. His left leg got amputated after he hit an IED while serving in Iraq in February 2007. After the injury, one of the Operation Comfort personnel have suggested him to join the San Antonio Rampage sledge hockey club where he later played from 2009 to 2011 seasons.",
"score": "1.4502211"
},
{
"id": "1885323",
"title": "Marc Santo",
"text": " Marc Santo is a writer, film and television producer, and director. His work includes off beat travel guides, music videos, documentaries and profiles on notable chefs, artists and musicians for clients that include MTV, Tribeca Productions and Wieden & Kennedy.",
"score": "1.4492947"
},
{
"id": "31608667",
"title": "Puerto Rico at the 2008 Summer Olympics",
"text": " Ángel Román Martínez competed for Puerto Rico in taekwondo. Born in 1984, Román entered Beijing at age 24, competing in the men's welterweight class (which includes athletes under 80 kilograms in weight). Román had not previously competed in any Olympic games or events. During the course of the competition's first round, which took place on August 22, Román faced Canada's Sébastien Michaud in the sixth match. The Puerto Rican judoka won a total of two deuk-jeom (points), with one in the first round and one in the third round, but lost a deuk-jeom to a deduction. His Canadian opponent scored a total of three deuk-jeom, but lost one to a deduction. Thus, as Michaud ended ",
"score": "1.4443767"
},
{
"id": "3486579",
"title": "Marc Fenelus",
"text": " Marc-Donald Fenelus (or Marco; born 22 August 1992) is a Turks & Caicos Islands footballer who currently plays for Taiwan Football Premier League club Taiwan Steel.",
"score": "1.4442008"
},
{
"id": "13080574",
"title": "Marc Megna",
"text": " Marc Megna (born July 30, 1976) is a former professional American and Canadian football linebacker and defensive end in the National Football League, NFL Europe League and Canadian Football League. In his seven-year pro career he played for the New England Patriots and Cincinnati Bengals of the NFL, the Barcelona Dragons and Berlin Thunder of NFL Europe, and the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL. Megna played college football at Richmond.",
"score": "1.4428751"
}
] | [
"Marc Santo-Roman\n Marc Santo-Roman (born 13 September 1960) is a French chess grandmaster, born in Toulouse.",
"Marc Santo-Roman\n According to Chessmetrics, at his peak in October 1991 Santo-Roman's play was equivalent to a rating of 2557, and he was ranked number 317 in the world. His best single performance was at FRA-ch Angers, 1990, where he scored 11 of 14 possible points (79%) against 2462-rated opposition, for a performance rating of 2644. On the April 2009 FIDE list his Elo rating is 2392.",
"Marc Santo-Roman\n He won three French Chess Championship at Angers 1990, Montpellier 1991, and Chambéry 1994 and played for France in the 29th Chess Olympiad at Novi Sad 1990, 30th Chess Olympiad at Manila 1992 and in the 31st Chess Olympiad at Moscow 1994. Santo-Roman was awarded the International Master title in 1984 and the Grandmaster title in 1996.",
"Marc Verica\n In 2011, Marc signed with the Cougars de Saint-Ouen l'Aumône, France. The Cougars play in the highest level of competition in France (Division 1).",
"Rico Roman\n In 2012 he joined Dallas Stars which he helped by winning the USA Hockey Sled Classic Division A Championship. From 2011 till now he serves on the United States National Sled Hockey Team and was a winner of the 2013 USA Hockey Sled Cup. In November 2011 he became a silver medal recipient at the IPC World Sledge Hockey Challenge and next year won gold at the same place, following by another silver in 2013. In 2012 he was awarded with a gold medal by winning the International Paralympic Committee Ice Sledge Hockey World Championship and next year won a silver one at the same place. Prior to sled hockey he was quoted saying: \"They asked me to come out and play sled hockey, and I was like, I don't come from a hockey state. I'm from Oregon. We don't play hockey there. How many Hispanics do you see playing hockey?\" In 2014 he got another gold medal, this time at Sochi Paralympics.",
"Marc Minguell\n Marc Minguell Alférez (born 14 January 1985 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo player who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in three consecutive Summer Olympics (2008 Beijing, 2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season.",
"Marc Martí (basketball)\n Martí played for the Spanish men's national team on the 2016 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, winning gold medal. Also a member of the team on the 2017 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship.",
"Jean-Marc Pansa\n Jean-Marc Pansa (born 20 August 1997) is a French professional basketball player for Antibes Sharks of the LNB Pro B. Standing at 2.08 m (6 ft 10 in), Pansa plays as center.",
"Eric Bachier Román\n Bachier showed interest in sports since childhood, particularly baseball. As he grew up, he played Class A and Double-A baseball. Bachier was also a member of the National Junior Team of Puerto Rico. He was also a gold and silver medalist at the Intercollegiate Games (Justas LAI).",
"Zac Santo\n Santo played for the Mount Pritchard Mounties in the NSW Cup. In September, Santo was named at fullback in the 2016 Intrust Super Premiership NSW Team of the Year. Santo was a member of The Mounties side which lost in The NSW Cup Grand Final to Illawarra 21-20",
"Zac Santo\n In 2011, Santo joined the North Queensland Cowboys NYC squad on a trial and train contract and represented the Queensland under 18s team. That year he played in the Cowboys' 2011 NYC Grand Final defeat by the New Zealand Warriors. At the end of 2012, Santo won the Cowboys' NYC Player of the Year award. In 2013, Santo played for the Queensland under 20s team. He finished his NYC career at the end of 2013 with 65 games, scoring 49 tries. On 5 August 2013, Santo re-signed with the Cowboys on a 2-year contract and joined the Cowboys first grade squad in 2014.",
"Rico Roman\n Rico Roman (born February 4, 1981) is an American gold medal ice sled hockey player and Purple Heart recipient from Portland, Oregon who competed in 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, Russia.",
"Nick Dal Santo\n lost star midfielder Lenny Hayes to a knee ligament problem and the captain, Luke Ball, was also struggling with injury. In Hayes' absence Dal Santo began to cop a heavy tag from opposition teams each week and this lessened his impact on the game. He still performed strongly for the year, however, and continued to be one of St Kilda's best players. In 2007, under new coach Ross Lyon, Dal Santo played some match-winning football, notching up 16 Brownlow votes for the year. He also played his 100th consecutive game in Round 20 of 2007, which meant that he had ",
"Marc Trasolini\n Marc Christian Trasolini (born June 21, 1990) is a Canadian professional basketball player for the Ibaraki Robots in Japan. He played college basketball for Santa Clara. Trasolini signed with the Ibaraki Robots on June 25, 2020.",
"Marc Dorion\n Marc Dorion (born June 22, 1987) is a Canadian ice sledge hockey player. He was born with spina bifida, which meant he could not use his legs. He began to play ice sledge hockey when he was 4, at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, and has continued in the sport ever since. He won gold at the 2006 Paralympics when he was 19, and was the team's youngest member. He has played for the Canadian national team since he was 16.",
"Rico Roman\n Roman, who is of Mexican American descent, graduated from Alpha High School in 2000 and joined United States Army soon after. His left leg got amputated after he hit an IED while serving in Iraq in February 2007. After the injury, one of the Operation Comfort personnel have suggested him to join the San Antonio Rampage sledge hockey club where he later played from 2009 to 2011 seasons.",
"Marc Santo\n Marc Santo is a writer, film and television producer, and director. His work includes off beat travel guides, music videos, documentaries and profiles on notable chefs, artists and musicians for clients that include MTV, Tribeca Productions and Wieden & Kennedy.",
"Puerto Rico at the 2008 Summer Olympics\n Ángel Román Martínez competed for Puerto Rico in taekwondo. Born in 1984, Román entered Beijing at age 24, competing in the men's welterweight class (which includes athletes under 80 kilograms in weight). Román had not previously competed in any Olympic games or events. During the course of the competition's first round, which took place on August 22, Román faced Canada's Sébastien Michaud in the sixth match. The Puerto Rican judoka won a total of two deuk-jeom (points), with one in the first round and one in the third round, but lost a deuk-jeom to a deduction. His Canadian opponent scored a total of three deuk-jeom, but lost one to a deduction. Thus, as Michaud ended ",
"Marc Fenelus\n Marc-Donald Fenelus (or Marco; born 22 August 1992) is a Turks & Caicos Islands footballer who currently plays for Taiwan Football Premier League club Taiwan Steel.",
"Marc Megna\n Marc Megna (born July 30, 1976) is a former professional American and Canadian football linebacker and defensive end in the National Football League, NFL Europe League and Canadian Football League. In his seven-year pro career he played for the New England Patriots and Cincinnati Bengals of the NFL, the Barcelona Dragons and Berlin Thunder of NFL Europe, and the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL. Megna played college football at Richmond."
] |
What sport does Sandar IL play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Sandar IL | 5,686,412 | 38 | [
{
"id": "29116989",
"title": "Sandar IL",
"text": " Sandar Idrettslag is a sports club from Sandar, Sandefjord, Norway. It was founded on 24 September 1931 as Framnes IL, but the name Sandar IL was taken already on 13 October 1931. The club has sections for association football and handball, and the team colors are red, black and white. Footballer Jon Midttun Lie played for Sandar IL from age 13 to age 16. In 2008 Lie's then-team Lillestrøm SK faced Sandar in the first round of the Norwegian Cup. Sandar also met another team from Tippeligaen in the first round of the cup in 2007, but lost 5-0 against Sandefjord Fotball. The men's team played in the Third Division, the fourth tier of Norwegian football, but controversially forfeited after three games of the 2010 season. In 2011, Sandar played in the Fourth Division, but was relegated to the Fifth Division. Terese Pedersen has played handball for Sandar.",
"score": "1.8357828"
},
{
"id": "2651600",
"title": "Sander IL",
"text": " Sander Idrettslag is a Norwegian multi-sports club from Sander, Hedmark. It has sections for association football and Nordic skiing. The club was founded in 1920. The men's football team plays in the 4. divisjon, the fifth tier of Norwegian football. It was a mainstay in the 3. divisjon from 1998 to 2010 and later had two shorter stints in 2012–2014 and 2016. Sander's proximity to the city of Kongsvinger meant that several players featured for Sander before or after playing for Kongsvinger IL, including Norway international Martin Linnes.",
"score": "1.6430736"
},
{
"id": "3821970",
"title": "IL Runar",
"text": " The men's football team currently plays in the 4. divisjon, the fifth tier of the Norwegian football league system. They have never played in the top tier, but had its last stint in the 1. divisjon (second tier) in 1997, with players like Morten Fevang who later became a significant player in the top division and captain of Odd Grenland. In late 1998, Runar formed the elite football team Sandefjord Fotball with local rivals Sandefjord BK, in an attempt to take Sandefjord back to the top level of football in Norway. The plan succeeded, as Sandefjord Fotball, as of the 2019 season, have been playing in the top flight in 7 out of the last 14 seasons.",
"score": "1.6276326"
},
{
"id": "3821967",
"title": "IL Runar",
"text": " Idrettslaget Runar is a Norwegian sports club from Haukerød in Sandefjord. It has sections for athletics, handball, football, and cross-country skiing. It was established on January 7, 1949.",
"score": "1.6215806"
},
{
"id": "12327546",
"title": "Jon Midttun Lie",
"text": " Midttun Lie lived in Haukeli until he was 12, where he played football for IL Rein. Midttun Lie moved with his family to Sandefjord in 1992 and started to play football for the local club Sandar IL at the age of 13 after a short spell at Helgerød IL. He later joined Sandefjord BK, where he played for the first team. When Sandefjord BK and IL Runar merged ahead of the 1999 season, Midttun Lie joined the new team Sandefjord Fotball.",
"score": "1.6022849"
},
{
"id": "3821969",
"title": "IL Runar",
"text": " The men's handball team currently plays in the first league of Norwegian handball, and was relegated from the first league in 2006–07 season, but they soon returned to the first league again. Runar won the highest league in the seasons 1993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96 and 1999–00. They also won the Limburgse Handbal Dagen in 1998, where they defeated Sporting Toulouse ’31 with 29-28 in the final.",
"score": "1.5520239"
},
{
"id": "9470500",
"title": "IL Vestar",
"text": " defeated by SC Leipzig. Its best known players were Karen Fladset, Kristin Midthun, Linn Siri Jensen, Ingrid Steen and Cathrine Svendsen. In athletics, their best known athlete was sprinter Richard Simonsen. One other sprinter won national gold medals; Kåre Magne Åmot in the 100 metres in 1980 and 1981. Handball player Karen Fladset was also a good discus thrower with two Norwegian championships. Leif Rise won national silver and bronze medals in the discus throw and shot put, Astrid Skei won one silver medal in the javelin throw, and John Kristian Johnsen and Oddvin Moland won silver and bronze medals in the triple jump.",
"score": "1.5346109"
},
{
"id": "3323907",
"title": "Taylor Sander",
"text": " the roster for the matches against Poland June 12 and 13, 2015, in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, due to an ankle injury, but did travel and practice with the team. Coach John Speraw mentioned during the press conference following the 2nd match against Poland that he was not sure when Sander would be ready to play again. He traveled with the team to Iran and was back on the roster for the June 19 and 21 matches played/to be played in Tehran, Iran at the Azadi Stadium. He played the entire 3rd set of the 0-3 (19-25, 27-29, 20-25) loss to Iran June 19, 2015. He scored 5 points on 5 kills from 9 attempts. He also had 1 dig and 4 excellent receptions out of 5 attempts.",
"score": "1.5284634"
},
{
"id": "8956270",
"title": "Amin Askar",
"text": " Amin Soleiman Askar (Aamiin Askaar, امين عسكر) (born 1 October 1985) is an Ethiopian -Norwegian professional football player who currently plays for Kristiansund. Askar also holds Norwegian citizenship, having lived in Norway since he was two years old.",
"score": "1.5017706"
},
{
"id": "10721910",
"title": "Sandnes IL",
"text": " Sandnes Idrettslag is a Norwegian sports club from Sandnes, founded in 1946. The club has sections for track and field athletics, orienteering and skiing. Athletes competing for Sandnes IL include Henrik Ingebrigtsen, Bjørnar Ustad Kristensen, Filip Ingebrigtsen, Lars Vikan Rise, Per Magne Florvaag, Marius Bakken Støle, and Jakob Ingebrigtsen.",
"score": "1.5005308"
},
{
"id": "9773136",
"title": "Furtuna Velaj",
"text": " 2013, where she came in as a substitute. After finishing the season in Finland at second place and winning the 2013 Finnish Cup with her team, she transferred to Kolbotn IL in the Norwegian Toppserie at the beginning of 2014. Velaj played for Albania in Sarpsborg, Norway in late 2013, and shortly afterwards she signed a contract with the Norwegian club Kolbotn IL. She received a shoulder injury playing for the club at La Manga. After a successful season with Kolbotn IL she transferred to German club SC Sand, where she played for the first and second team. Velaj helped SC Sand II win the Sud Regional Championship, helping the team get promoted to 2nd Bundesliga in 2015 and finishing as top goalscorer in the league with 20 goals. Velaj played one season with the 2nd team and two half season with the first team.",
"score": "1.4993482"
},
{
"id": "6608309",
"title": "Sander Baart",
"text": " Alexander Baart (born 30 April 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player of Belgian descent who plays as a defender or midfielder for Dutch club Oranje-Rood and the Dutch national team.",
"score": "1.479306"
},
{
"id": "28896553",
"title": "Sander Kartum",
"text": " Sander Kartum (born 3 October 1995) is a Norwegian football midfielder who plays for Kristiansund. He started his youth career in Lånke IL, switching to IL Stjørdals-Blink in 2012. He made his senior debut in the summer of 2012, and took part in the team's rise from the 3. divisjon to the 1. divisjon. Ahead of the 2021 season he was bought by Kristiansund BK. He made his Eliteserien debut in May 2021 against Molde and scored his first goal later that month.",
"score": "1.4757662"
},
{
"id": "4788950",
"title": "Sander Risan Mørk",
"text": " Sander Risan Mørk (born 6 December 2000) is a Norwegian midfielder who plays for Sandefjord. Raised in IL Flint, he made his senior debut there in 2016 before joining Sandefjord's youth setup. He made his senior debut here in November 2018, and also played one 2019 Norwegian Football Cup game before being loaned out to IF Fram Larvik. He played the 2020 Eliteserien opener.",
"score": "1.4707615"
},
{
"id": "16281261",
"title": "Sander Raieste",
"text": " Raieste began playing basketball with Viimsi and Audentes. On 12 August 2016, Raieste signed a five-year contract with Baskonia. He was loaned to Kalev/Cramo in the 2019-20 season, averaging 5.9 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. Raieste signed a four-year extension with Baskonia on 4 August 2020.",
"score": "1.4681563"
},
{
"id": "16281260",
"title": "Sander Raieste",
"text": " Sander Raieste (born 31 March 1999) is an Estonian professional basketball player for Kirolbet Baskonia of the Spanish Liga ACB and the EuroLeague. Standing at 2.04 m (6ft 8 in), he plays at the small forward position.",
"score": "1.459439"
},
{
"id": "6608311",
"title": "Sander Baart",
"text": " As a junior player, he played for the Belgian national team Boys Under 16 and won the European title with them. Later on, he switched to the Dutch national teams and won European silver and gold medals for the Dutch under-21 team and the silver medal at the Junior World Championship. He played his first official match for the senior Dutch national men's team in 2007 against South Korea. He is the only player to be selected for the Dutch national team without ever having played in the Dutch competition prior to his debut. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed ",
"score": "1.4503117"
},
{
"id": "13580818",
"title": "Sander Puri",
"text": " Puri is one of three triplets: his brother, Eino Puri, is also a footballer and his sister, Kadri Puri, is a volleyball player.",
"score": "1.4499836"
},
{
"id": "3821968",
"title": "IL Runar",
"text": " Its athletics section is known for its prominent long-distance runners. Olympic competitors Gunhild Halle Haugen and Marius Bakken represented IL Runar, and so did Susanne Wigene for a limited period. Local rivals in both handball and athletics are Sandefjord TIF.",
"score": "1.4402965"
},
{
"id": "16057121",
"title": "Sandnessjøen IL",
"text": " Sandnessjøen Idrettslag is a Norwegian sports club from Sandnessjøen, Alstahaug, Nordland. It has sections for association football and team handball. The men's football team currently plays in the Third Division, the fourth tier of Norwegian football. It last played in the Norwegian Second Division in 1997.",
"score": "1.4349154"
}
] | [
"Sandar IL\n Sandar Idrettslag is a sports club from Sandar, Sandefjord, Norway. It was founded on 24 September 1931 as Framnes IL, but the name Sandar IL was taken already on 13 October 1931. The club has sections for association football and handball, and the team colors are red, black and white. Footballer Jon Midttun Lie played for Sandar IL from age 13 to age 16. In 2008 Lie's then-team Lillestrøm SK faced Sandar in the first round of the Norwegian Cup. Sandar also met another team from Tippeligaen in the first round of the cup in 2007, but lost 5-0 against Sandefjord Fotball. The men's team played in the Third Division, the fourth tier of Norwegian football, but controversially forfeited after three games of the 2010 season. In 2011, Sandar played in the Fourth Division, but was relegated to the Fifth Division. Terese Pedersen has played handball for Sandar.",
"Sander IL\n Sander Idrettslag is a Norwegian multi-sports club from Sander, Hedmark. It has sections for association football and Nordic skiing. The club was founded in 1920. The men's football team plays in the 4. divisjon, the fifth tier of Norwegian football. It was a mainstay in the 3. divisjon from 1998 to 2010 and later had two shorter stints in 2012–2014 and 2016. Sander's proximity to the city of Kongsvinger meant that several players featured for Sander before or after playing for Kongsvinger IL, including Norway international Martin Linnes.",
"IL Runar\n The men's football team currently plays in the 4. divisjon, the fifth tier of the Norwegian football league system. They have never played in the top tier, but had its last stint in the 1. divisjon (second tier) in 1997, with players like Morten Fevang who later became a significant player in the top division and captain of Odd Grenland. In late 1998, Runar formed the elite football team Sandefjord Fotball with local rivals Sandefjord BK, in an attempt to take Sandefjord back to the top level of football in Norway. The plan succeeded, as Sandefjord Fotball, as of the 2019 season, have been playing in the top flight in 7 out of the last 14 seasons.",
"IL Runar\n Idrettslaget Runar is a Norwegian sports club from Haukerød in Sandefjord. It has sections for athletics, handball, football, and cross-country skiing. It was established on January 7, 1949.",
"Jon Midttun Lie\n Midttun Lie lived in Haukeli until he was 12, where he played football for IL Rein. Midttun Lie moved with his family to Sandefjord in 1992 and started to play football for the local club Sandar IL at the age of 13 after a short spell at Helgerød IL. He later joined Sandefjord BK, where he played for the first team. When Sandefjord BK and IL Runar merged ahead of the 1999 season, Midttun Lie joined the new team Sandefjord Fotball.",
"IL Runar\n The men's handball team currently plays in the first league of Norwegian handball, and was relegated from the first league in 2006–07 season, but they soon returned to the first league again. Runar won the highest league in the seasons 1993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96 and 1999–00. They also won the Limburgse Handbal Dagen in 1998, where they defeated Sporting Toulouse ’31 with 29-28 in the final.",
"IL Vestar\n defeated by SC Leipzig. Its best known players were Karen Fladset, Kristin Midthun, Linn Siri Jensen, Ingrid Steen and Cathrine Svendsen. In athletics, their best known athlete was sprinter Richard Simonsen. One other sprinter won national gold medals; Kåre Magne Åmot in the 100 metres in 1980 and 1981. Handball player Karen Fladset was also a good discus thrower with two Norwegian championships. Leif Rise won national silver and bronze medals in the discus throw and shot put, Astrid Skei won one silver medal in the javelin throw, and John Kristian Johnsen and Oddvin Moland won silver and bronze medals in the triple jump.",
"Taylor Sander\n the roster for the matches against Poland June 12 and 13, 2015, in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, due to an ankle injury, but did travel and practice with the team. Coach John Speraw mentioned during the press conference following the 2nd match against Poland that he was not sure when Sander would be ready to play again. He traveled with the team to Iran and was back on the roster for the June 19 and 21 matches played/to be played in Tehran, Iran at the Azadi Stadium. He played the entire 3rd set of the 0-3 (19-25, 27-29, 20-25) loss to Iran June 19, 2015. He scored 5 points on 5 kills from 9 attempts. He also had 1 dig and 4 excellent receptions out of 5 attempts.",
"Amin Askar\n Amin Soleiman Askar (Aamiin Askaar, امين عسكر) (born 1 October 1985) is an Ethiopian -Norwegian professional football player who currently plays for Kristiansund. Askar also holds Norwegian citizenship, having lived in Norway since he was two years old.",
"Sandnes IL\n Sandnes Idrettslag is a Norwegian sports club from Sandnes, founded in 1946. The club has sections for track and field athletics, orienteering and skiing. Athletes competing for Sandnes IL include Henrik Ingebrigtsen, Bjørnar Ustad Kristensen, Filip Ingebrigtsen, Lars Vikan Rise, Per Magne Florvaag, Marius Bakken Støle, and Jakob Ingebrigtsen.",
"Furtuna Velaj\n 2013, where she came in as a substitute. After finishing the season in Finland at second place and winning the 2013 Finnish Cup with her team, she transferred to Kolbotn IL in the Norwegian Toppserie at the beginning of 2014. Velaj played for Albania in Sarpsborg, Norway in late 2013, and shortly afterwards she signed a contract with the Norwegian club Kolbotn IL. She received a shoulder injury playing for the club at La Manga. After a successful season with Kolbotn IL she transferred to German club SC Sand, where she played for the first and second team. Velaj helped SC Sand II win the Sud Regional Championship, helping the team get promoted to 2nd Bundesliga in 2015 and finishing as top goalscorer in the league with 20 goals. Velaj played one season with the 2nd team and two half season with the first team.",
"Sander Baart\n Alexander Baart (born 30 April 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player of Belgian descent who plays as a defender or midfielder for Dutch club Oranje-Rood and the Dutch national team.",
"Sander Kartum\n Sander Kartum (born 3 October 1995) is a Norwegian football midfielder who plays for Kristiansund. He started his youth career in Lånke IL, switching to IL Stjørdals-Blink in 2012. He made his senior debut in the summer of 2012, and took part in the team's rise from the 3. divisjon to the 1. divisjon. Ahead of the 2021 season he was bought by Kristiansund BK. He made his Eliteserien debut in May 2021 against Molde and scored his first goal later that month.",
"Sander Risan Mørk\n Sander Risan Mørk (born 6 December 2000) is a Norwegian midfielder who plays for Sandefjord. Raised in IL Flint, he made his senior debut there in 2016 before joining Sandefjord's youth setup. He made his senior debut here in November 2018, and also played one 2019 Norwegian Football Cup game before being loaned out to IF Fram Larvik. He played the 2020 Eliteserien opener.",
"Sander Raieste\n Raieste began playing basketball with Viimsi and Audentes. On 12 August 2016, Raieste signed a five-year contract with Baskonia. He was loaned to Kalev/Cramo in the 2019-20 season, averaging 5.9 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. Raieste signed a four-year extension with Baskonia on 4 August 2020.",
"Sander Raieste\n Sander Raieste (born 31 March 1999) is an Estonian professional basketball player for Kirolbet Baskonia of the Spanish Liga ACB and the EuroLeague. Standing at 2.04 m (6ft 8 in), he plays at the small forward position.",
"Sander Baart\n As a junior player, he played for the Belgian national team Boys Under 16 and won the European title with them. Later on, he switched to the Dutch national teams and won European silver and gold medals for the Dutch under-21 team and the silver medal at the Junior World Championship. He played his first official match for the senior Dutch national men's team in 2007 against South Korea. He is the only player to be selected for the Dutch national team without ever having played in the Dutch competition prior to his debut. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed ",
"Sander Puri\n Puri is one of three triplets: his brother, Eino Puri, is also a footballer and his sister, Kadri Puri, is a volleyball player.",
"IL Runar\n Its athletics section is known for its prominent long-distance runners. Olympic competitors Gunhild Halle Haugen and Marius Bakken represented IL Runar, and so did Susanne Wigene for a limited period. Local rivals in both handball and athletics are Sandefjord TIF.",
"Sandnessjøen IL\n Sandnessjøen Idrettslag is a Norwegian sports club from Sandnessjøen, Alstahaug, Nordland. It has sections for association football and team handball. The men's football team currently plays in the Third Division, the fourth tier of Norwegian football. It last played in the Norwegian Second Division in 1997."
] |
What sport does Francesco Reda play? | [
"road bicycle racing",
"bicycle road cycling",
"bicycle road race",
"road bicycle race",
"road cycling race",
"road cycle racing",
"road bike racing",
"cycle race"
] | sport | Francesco Reda | 442,737 | 73 | [
{
"id": "13905777",
"title": "Marco Reda",
"text": " club captain. On June 13, 2002, he was named for the first time in his career to the A-League Team of the Week. Early on in the season he was invited to a trial in Norway with Sogndal Fotball. His trial was a success and was offered a contract by the First Division club. In his debut season with Sogndal he was named the club's player of the year, and played a total of 70 matches and scored six goals. In 2006. after Sogndal were relegated to Norwegian First Division he signed a contract with Aalborg BK of the ",
"score": "1.7491565"
},
{
"id": "13905774",
"title": "Marco Reda",
"text": " Marco Reda (born June 22, 1977) is a Canadian former soccer player who began his professional career in the USL A-League with the Toronto Lynx where he developed his skills as a solid defender. This led to his transfer to Europe to sign with Sogndal, where he would eventually have a tenure in Scandinavia for six years. Reda would return to Toronto, this time to sign with expansion franchise Toronto FC, and would conclude his career in the USL First Division. He also played at the indoor level in the National Professional Soccer League with the Toronto ThunderHawks in 2000–2001. After his retirement from competitive soccer he briefly served as an assistant coach in the Canadian Soccer League with SC Toronto in 2012, and later became a teacher for Hudson College.",
"score": "1.721164"
},
{
"id": "4244251",
"title": "Team Idea 2010 ASD",
"text": " In July 2015 Francesco Reda, tested positive for EPO in an anti-doping control that was taken at the Italian Road Championships held on June 27. In February 2016, Reda was banned for eight years.",
"score": "1.7160807"
},
{
"id": "13905775",
"title": "Marco Reda",
"text": " Reda began his career at the college level with Winthrop University from 1996 to 1997. He went professional in 1998, after Peter Pinizzotto head coach of the Toronto Lynx signed him to a contract. In 1999, he was named the team captain for the club, and won the team's best defensive player award. In 2000, the captain assisted his franchise in qualifying for the postseason for the second time in the club's history. Toronto would finish third in the Northeast Division. In the playoffs the Lynx faced Richmond Kickers in the first round, and advanced to the next round by ",
"score": "1.7055328"
},
{
"id": "13905781",
"title": "Marco Reda",
"text": " Reda made his debut for Canada in a February 2005 friendly match against Northern Ireland and has earned a total of 7 caps, scoring 1 goal. He has a non-playing squad member at the 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup. His final international was a January 2008 friendly match against Martinique. He also played with the Canada men's national under-23 soccer team where he was selected for the 1999 Pan American Games.",
"score": "1.6725014"
},
{
"id": "5426981",
"title": "Francesco Pietrosanti",
"text": " Francesco Pietrosanti (born 3 December 1963 in L'Aquila) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current sports director. He played as a scrum-half. Pietrosanti played his entire career at L'Aquila Rugby, at the National Championship of Excellence, from 1982/83 to 1998/99. He won the National Championship title in 1993/94. He had 25 caps for Italy, from 1987 to 1993, scoring 5 tries, 20 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1991 Rugby World Cup, without playing. He has been team manager and sports director, since his retirement.",
"score": "1.6415018"
},
{
"id": "449428",
"title": "Francis Zé",
"text": " Zé started his professional career with Sampdoria. In February 2001 along with Thomas Job and Jean Ondoa were investigated by FIGC for alleged falsification of documents in order to treat as a European Union citizen. In July 2001, they were banned for 6 months. In February 2002, he was loaned to Cremonese along with Ondoa. In 2002-03 season Zé returned to Genoa and made his Serie B debut on 24 May 2003, replaced Andrea Rabito in the 80th minutes. In 2004-05 season he left for Swiss Challenge League side Chiasso (but also from Italian speaking region), played 16 times. In January 2007 he left for Red Star Waasland but his contract was not extended at the end of season. In February 2004, he scored a goal for Cameroon Olympic team at 2004 CAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament.",
"score": "1.6362276"
},
{
"id": "25159520",
"title": "Reda Bellahcene",
"text": " Reda Bellahcene (born January 21, 1993 in Schiltigheim) is a French-Algerian football player who is currently playing for SC Schiltigheim in the Championnat National 2 Group B.",
"score": "1.6355797"
},
{
"id": "1355535",
"title": "Reda Boultam",
"text": " Reda Boultam (born 3 March 1998) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Serie B club Cosenza, on loan from Salernitana.",
"score": "1.6314775"
},
{
"id": "32840930",
"title": "Sanda (sport)",
"text": "Alessandro Riguccini ",
"score": "1.6251776"
},
{
"id": "7396297",
"title": "Mohamed Reda",
"text": " Mohamed Ali Anwar Reda (محمد علي أنور رضا; born April 16, 1989 in Cairo), known as Mohamed Reda, is a professional squash player who represented Egypt. He reached a career-high world ranking of World No. 23 in October 2011.",
"score": "1.6247289"
},
{
"id": "13905779",
"title": "Marco Reda",
"text": " Reda was released by Toronto in November 2007. On March 4, 2008, he signed with the Charleston Battery of the USL First Division. With Charleston he was named the team captain, and helped the Battery reach the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup final, where the organization lost to a score of 2–1 to D.C. United. On February 11, 2009, he signed with the Vancouver Whitecaps, During his tenure with Vancouver he helped the Whitecaps reach the USL playoff finals, but were defeated by the Montreal Impact. He was released by the Whitecaps at the end of the 2009 season.",
"score": "1.6206021"
},
{
"id": "9233098",
"title": "Francesco Bona",
"text": " After the end of his sports career, Bona worked as an engineer in his hometown of Biella.",
"score": "1.617177"
},
{
"id": "30685675",
"title": "Francesco Bordi",
"text": " Bordi was first called into the Italy national setup in 2012, when he was included in coach Daniele Zoratto's under-16 squad for the international friendly against Switzerland. He played 66 minutes, and was booked. He made a further seven appearances at under-16 level, and registered an assist against Russia in a 3-1 win. He was called up to the under-17 squad but never made the field. Despite this, Bordi went on to be included in the under-18 squad for a game against Switzerland on 22 October 2014. He was substituted in to play the final 25 minutes of an eventual 0-1 loss.",
"score": "1.609316"
},
{
"id": "31398632",
"title": "Francisco Frione",
"text": " Francisco Frione, also known as Francesco Frione (21 July 1912 – 17 February 1935), was an Uruguayan-Italian professional football player. He was born in Uruguay and played for the Uruguay national football team, but later was naturalized as an Italian citizen and played for the Italian national B team. Frione's family was of Ligurian descent, from the city of Finale Ligure.",
"score": "1.6066806"
},
{
"id": "14366793",
"title": "Francesco Antonucci",
"text": " Antonucci played in the youth of La Louvière Centre, Charleroi, Anderlecht and Ajax. In the winter break of the 2016–17 season he moved to Monaco. At Monaco, he played for the second team, competing in the Championnat National 2, the fourth tier of the French football league system.",
"score": "1.6042624"
},
{
"id": "25159521",
"title": "Reda Bellahcene",
"text": " Reda Bellahcene, a defensive midfielder of 23 years who currently plays at Saint-Louis Neuweg, French club CFA. Formed in Strasbourg He spent his first professional contract with the champions of Algeria for three years, Bellahcene, who was tenured on 26 occasions in 30 matches so far with St. Louis who finished the season in eighth place in the Group B of the CFA should be an additional asset in the midfield usmiste already expanded by experienced players.",
"score": "1.5933497"
},
{
"id": "26962639",
"title": "Francesco Flachi",
"text": " In 2021, Flachi announced he had been training with Italian fifth-tier team Signa 1914, and was planning to make a comeback as a player when his ban expired in January of 2022.",
"score": "1.5900629"
},
{
"id": "9520921",
"title": "Massimo Ravazzolo",
"text": " Massimo Ravazzolo (born 5 September 1972 in Calvisano) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current coach. He played as a wing and as a fullback. He played for Rugby Calvisano, from 1988/89 to 2005/06, where he had his debut at first team aged only 16 years old. He won the National Championship in 2004/05 and the Cup of Italy in 2003/04. He later would play for Gran Ducato Parma Rugby (2006/07), Rugby Brescia (2006/07-2008/09) and Rugby Calvisano (2009/10-2010/11), his last team. He had 23 caps for Italy, from 1993 to 1997, scoring 3 tries, 15 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1995 Rugby World Cup, playing a single match and remaining scoreless. Ravazzolo after finishing his player career, became a coach. He was the coach of Rugby Reggio in 2011/12.",
"score": "1.5885029"
},
{
"id": "32266696",
"title": "Francesco Postiglione",
"text": " Francesco Postiglione (born 29 April 1972 in Naples) is a former swimmer and water polo player from Italy, who represented his native country at four Summer Olympics: 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004. At his Olympic debut he competed as a breaststroke swimmer (1992). Four years later he claimed the bronze medal with the men's national team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, USA.",
"score": "1.5868144"
}
] | [
"Marco Reda\n club captain. On June 13, 2002, he was named for the first time in his career to the A-League Team of the Week. Early on in the season he was invited to a trial in Norway with Sogndal Fotball. His trial was a success and was offered a contract by the First Division club. In his debut season with Sogndal he was named the club's player of the year, and played a total of 70 matches and scored six goals. In 2006. after Sogndal were relegated to Norwegian First Division he signed a contract with Aalborg BK of the ",
"Marco Reda\n Marco Reda (born June 22, 1977) is a Canadian former soccer player who began his professional career in the USL A-League with the Toronto Lynx where he developed his skills as a solid defender. This led to his transfer to Europe to sign with Sogndal, where he would eventually have a tenure in Scandinavia for six years. Reda would return to Toronto, this time to sign with expansion franchise Toronto FC, and would conclude his career in the USL First Division. He also played at the indoor level in the National Professional Soccer League with the Toronto ThunderHawks in 2000–2001. After his retirement from competitive soccer he briefly served as an assistant coach in the Canadian Soccer League with SC Toronto in 2012, and later became a teacher for Hudson College.",
"Team Idea 2010 ASD\n In July 2015 Francesco Reda, tested positive for EPO in an anti-doping control that was taken at the Italian Road Championships held on June 27. In February 2016, Reda was banned for eight years.",
"Marco Reda\n Reda began his career at the college level with Winthrop University from 1996 to 1997. He went professional in 1998, after Peter Pinizzotto head coach of the Toronto Lynx signed him to a contract. In 1999, he was named the team captain for the club, and won the team's best defensive player award. In 2000, the captain assisted his franchise in qualifying for the postseason for the second time in the club's history. Toronto would finish third in the Northeast Division. In the playoffs the Lynx faced Richmond Kickers in the first round, and advanced to the next round by ",
"Marco Reda\n Reda made his debut for Canada in a February 2005 friendly match against Northern Ireland and has earned a total of 7 caps, scoring 1 goal. He has a non-playing squad member at the 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup. His final international was a January 2008 friendly match against Martinique. He also played with the Canada men's national under-23 soccer team where he was selected for the 1999 Pan American Games.",
"Francesco Pietrosanti\n Francesco Pietrosanti (born 3 December 1963 in L'Aquila) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current sports director. He played as a scrum-half. Pietrosanti played his entire career at L'Aquila Rugby, at the National Championship of Excellence, from 1982/83 to 1998/99. He won the National Championship title in 1993/94. He had 25 caps for Italy, from 1987 to 1993, scoring 5 tries, 20 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1991 Rugby World Cup, without playing. He has been team manager and sports director, since his retirement.",
"Francis Zé\n Zé started his professional career with Sampdoria. In February 2001 along with Thomas Job and Jean Ondoa were investigated by FIGC for alleged falsification of documents in order to treat as a European Union citizen. In July 2001, they were banned for 6 months. In February 2002, he was loaned to Cremonese along with Ondoa. In 2002-03 season Zé returned to Genoa and made his Serie B debut on 24 May 2003, replaced Andrea Rabito in the 80th minutes. In 2004-05 season he left for Swiss Challenge League side Chiasso (but also from Italian speaking region), played 16 times. In January 2007 he left for Red Star Waasland but his contract was not extended at the end of season. In February 2004, he scored a goal for Cameroon Olympic team at 2004 CAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament.",
"Reda Bellahcene\n Reda Bellahcene (born January 21, 1993 in Schiltigheim) is a French-Algerian football player who is currently playing for SC Schiltigheim in the Championnat National 2 Group B.",
"Reda Boultam\n Reda Boultam (born 3 March 1998) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Serie B club Cosenza, on loan from Salernitana.",
"Sanda (sport)\nAlessandro Riguccini ",
"Mohamed Reda\n Mohamed Ali Anwar Reda (محمد علي أنور رضا; born April 16, 1989 in Cairo), known as Mohamed Reda, is a professional squash player who represented Egypt. He reached a career-high world ranking of World No. 23 in October 2011.",
"Marco Reda\n Reda was released by Toronto in November 2007. On March 4, 2008, he signed with the Charleston Battery of the USL First Division. With Charleston he was named the team captain, and helped the Battery reach the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup final, where the organization lost to a score of 2–1 to D.C. United. On February 11, 2009, he signed with the Vancouver Whitecaps, During his tenure with Vancouver he helped the Whitecaps reach the USL playoff finals, but were defeated by the Montreal Impact. He was released by the Whitecaps at the end of the 2009 season.",
"Francesco Bona\n After the end of his sports career, Bona worked as an engineer in his hometown of Biella.",
"Francesco Bordi\n Bordi was first called into the Italy national setup in 2012, when he was included in coach Daniele Zoratto's under-16 squad for the international friendly against Switzerland. He played 66 minutes, and was booked. He made a further seven appearances at under-16 level, and registered an assist against Russia in a 3-1 win. He was called up to the under-17 squad but never made the field. Despite this, Bordi went on to be included in the under-18 squad for a game against Switzerland on 22 October 2014. He was substituted in to play the final 25 minutes of an eventual 0-1 loss.",
"Francisco Frione\n Francisco Frione, also known as Francesco Frione (21 July 1912 – 17 February 1935), was an Uruguayan-Italian professional football player. He was born in Uruguay and played for the Uruguay national football team, but later was naturalized as an Italian citizen and played for the Italian national B team. Frione's family was of Ligurian descent, from the city of Finale Ligure.",
"Francesco Antonucci\n Antonucci played in the youth of La Louvière Centre, Charleroi, Anderlecht and Ajax. In the winter break of the 2016–17 season he moved to Monaco. At Monaco, he played for the second team, competing in the Championnat National 2, the fourth tier of the French football league system.",
"Reda Bellahcene\n Reda Bellahcene, a defensive midfielder of 23 years who currently plays at Saint-Louis Neuweg, French club CFA. Formed in Strasbourg He spent his first professional contract with the champions of Algeria for three years, Bellahcene, who was tenured on 26 occasions in 30 matches so far with St. Louis who finished the season in eighth place in the Group B of the CFA should be an additional asset in the midfield usmiste already expanded by experienced players.",
"Francesco Flachi\n In 2021, Flachi announced he had been training with Italian fifth-tier team Signa 1914, and was planning to make a comeback as a player when his ban expired in January of 2022.",
"Massimo Ravazzolo\n Massimo Ravazzolo (born 5 September 1972 in Calvisano) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current coach. He played as a wing and as a fullback. He played for Rugby Calvisano, from 1988/89 to 2005/06, where he had his debut at first team aged only 16 years old. He won the National Championship in 2004/05 and the Cup of Italy in 2003/04. He later would play for Gran Ducato Parma Rugby (2006/07), Rugby Brescia (2006/07-2008/09) and Rugby Calvisano (2009/10-2010/11), his last team. He had 23 caps for Italy, from 1993 to 1997, scoring 3 tries, 15 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1995 Rugby World Cup, playing a single match and remaining scoreless. Ravazzolo after finishing his player career, became a coach. He was the coach of Rugby Reggio in 2011/12.",
"Francesco Postiglione\n Francesco Postiglione (born 29 April 1972 in Naples) is a former swimmer and water polo player from Italy, who represented his native country at four Summer Olympics: 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004. At his Olympic debut he competed as a breaststroke swimmer (1992). Four years later he claimed the bronze medal with the men's national team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, USA."
] |
What sport does Pedro Ferreira-Mendes play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Pedro Ferreira-Mendes | 5,411,527 | 93 | [
{
"id": "10187049",
"title": "Pedro Ferreira-Mendes",
"text": " Pedro Ferreira-Mendes (born May 13, 1990) is a Brazilian footballer who most recently played for Puerto Rico FC of the North American Soccer League. He has previously played for the Atlanta Silverbacks, Indy Eleven, and Minnesota United FC in the NASL.",
"score": "1.9827112"
},
{
"id": "10187050",
"title": "Pedro Ferreira-Mendes",
"text": " In December 2013, Ferreira-Mendes signed for North American Soccer League side Indy Eleven. On August 15, 2014, Ferreira-Mendes moved from Indy Eleven to fellow NASL side Minnesota United FC. On July 8, 2015, Ferreira-Mendes signed, along with his twin brother Paulo, with the Atlanta Silverbacks. Ferreira-Mendes was released by Puerto Rico FC at the end of their 2016 season.",
"score": "1.7769191"
},
{
"id": "9143656",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": " Pedro Rafael Amado Mendes (born 6 December 1993) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder and is currently a free agent.",
"score": "1.7470124"
},
{
"id": "1557626",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born April 1990)",
"text": " Born in Guimarães, Mendes played youth football for four different clubs, including two spells with local Vitória Sport Clube. He made his senior debut in 2009 with Gondomar S.C. in the third level and, after two seasons, signed with Cypriot Second Division team Doxa Katokopias FC. In the summer of 2012, Mendes joined PSFC Chernomorets Burgas. His input for the Bulgarians consisted of 22 minutes in a 1–3 away loss against PFC Lokomotiv Sofia for the Bulgarian Cup, and he was released at the end of the campaign. In the following years, Mendes competed in the Portuguese third tier, with F.C. Lixa and Varzim SC.",
"score": "1.7205532"
},
{
"id": "9143659",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": " On 26 October 2020, it was confirmed that Mendes had signed with Hong Kong Premier League club Southern. On 21 May 2021, Mendes left the club due to injury.",
"score": "1.7110989"
},
{
"id": "7996286",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)",
"text": " Pedro Filipe Teodósio Mendes (born 1 October 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Ligue 1 club Montpellier HSC as a central defender.",
"score": "1.7053841"
},
{
"id": "7996288",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)",
"text": " Returning to Sporting for the 2012–13 campaign, Mendes was made captain of the reserves who competed in the second tier, also appearing sporadically for the main squad. On 28 May 2013, he signed a five-year contract with Parma F.C. in Serie A as a free agent. On 21 January 2014, Mendes moved to fellow league club U.S. Sassuolo Calcio in a co-ownership deal with Parma. In June he was bought by the latter, who sold Raman Chibsah and Nicola Sansone to the former on the same day.",
"score": "1.7049774"
},
{
"id": "2004683",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)",
"text": " Mendes won his first cap for Portugal at under-21 level on 11 October 2019, in a 4–2 away loss against the Netherlands in the 2021 UEFA European Championship qualifiers where he replaced A.C. Milan's Rafael Leão.",
"score": "1.6914821"
},
{
"id": "2004681",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)",
"text": " Born in Guimarães, Mendes started his youth career with local clubs Vitória S.C. and Moreirense F.C. before joining Sporting CP's academy at the age of 18. On 19 September 2019, after having scored seven goals in six games for the under-23 side to start the new season and before he had made his debut with the first team in the Primeira Liga due to registration problems, he appeared with the latter in a group stage match in the UEFA Europa League against PSV Eindhoven, and found the net immediately after having come as an 81st-minute substitute for fellow youth graduate Miguel Luís, albeit in a 3–2 away defeat; in the process, he became Sporting's first player ",
"score": "1.6897954"
},
{
"id": "1557625",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born April 1990)",
"text": " Pedro Miguel Alves Mendes (born 16 April 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Porto D'Ave as a left winger.",
"score": "1.6873648"
},
{
"id": "2004680",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)",
"text": " Pedro Manuel Lobo Peixoto Mineiro Mendes (born 1 August 1999) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a striker for Rio Ave on loan from Sporting CP.",
"score": "1.6797352"
},
{
"id": "7996287",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)",
"text": " Born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, to Portuguese parents, Mendes reached Sporting CP's youth system in 2005, aged nearly 15. In his first two senior seasons he played with Real SC (third division) and Servette FC (Switzerland, second level), in both cases on loan, helping the latter club to promotion. In the summer of 2011, still owned by Sporting, Mendes joined Real Madrid, being assigned to the B team. On 7 December 2011 he made his debut with the main squad, coming on as a substitute for Álvaro Arbeloa midway through the second half of a 3–0 away win against AFC Ajax in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League; during his spell with the Merengues, several of his Castilla teammates expressed their dissatisfaction over what they saw as a preferential treatment by first-team manager José Mourinho, the player's compatriot.",
"score": "1.6698027"
},
{
"id": "7996291",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)",
"text": " Mendes won exactly 50 caps for Portugal at youth level, including 13 for the under-21 team for whom he scored in a 1–1 home draw against Poland for the 2013 UEFA European Championship qualifiers. His maiden full appearance occurred on 14 October 2018, when he replaced S.L. Benfica's Rúben Dias in the 56th minute of the 3–1 friendly victory over Scotland at Hampden Park.",
"score": "1.6667345"
},
{
"id": "27271540",
"title": "Jone Pedro",
"text": " Pedro lived in the Netherlands and Portugal as a child and is the son of Adriano Pedro, who was an Angolan national team basketball player.",
"score": "1.665775"
},
{
"id": "28351508",
"title": "Joaquim Ferreira (rugby union)",
"text": " The Portuguese prop played all his career for CDUP, since he was 17 years old. He is currently the most capped player from his country, having played 84 games for Portugal national team, with 3 tries scored, 15 points in aggregate, from 1993 to 2007. His first match was on April 3, 1993, in a 41-13 loss to Romania, in Lisbon. Ferreira played in three games at the 2007 Rugby World Cup, scoring a try against Romania, in a 14-10 loss, in what would be his last competitive match. He was the captain of that same game due to Vasco Uva's absence. He retired from rugby after the tournament, aged 34. He was assistant coach to Tomaz Morais in the Portuguese national team. He was nominated head coach of CDUP for the 2008/2009 season.",
"score": "1.6540043"
},
{
"id": "9143657",
"title": "Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": " Born in Barreiro, Setúbal District of Angolan descent, Mendes spent the vast majority of his career in the Portuguese lower leagues. He joined Primeira Liga club Vitória F.C. as a 16-year-old, making his Primeira Liga debut with the first team on 6 November 2011 when he came on as a second-half substitute in a 0–0 home draw against Gil Vicente FC, being subsequently praised by manager Bruno Ribeiro. Mendes also had a brief spell in the Angolan Girabola, with C.R.D. Libolo.",
"score": "1.6519234"
},
{
"id": "13589806",
"title": "Pedro Ferreira (footballer, born 1998)",
"text": " Pedro Miguel Dinis Ferreira (born 5 January 1998) is a Portuguese footballer who plays as a midfielder for AaB.",
"score": "1.6420187"
},
{
"id": "7592301",
"title": "Pedro Castro (racquetball)",
"text": " Castro is also an accomplished baseball player, and has competed in four seasons of the Ligue de baseball majeur du Québec. In 2017, his first of three seasons with Acton Vale, Castro won the league championship. He played with Montreal in the 2020 season. Castro's mother is Chilean, which makes him eligible for the Chile national baseball team. He hopes to play at the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile.",
"score": "1.6307955"
},
{
"id": "2558570",
"title": "Paulo Mendes",
"text": " Paulo Ferreira-Mendes (born May 13, 1990) is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Puerto Rico FC in the North American Soccer League.",
"score": "1.6259756"
},
{
"id": "3048332",
"title": "Pedro Cabral (rugby union)",
"text": " Pedro Cabral (born 29 June 1983 in Lisbon) is a Portuguese rugby union player. He plays as a fly-half and as a fullback. He is currently a member of CDUL. He also plays for Lusitanos XV for the Amlin Challenge Cup. He has 37 caps for Portugal, from 2006 to 2011, with 2 tries, 24 conversions, 37 penalties and 5 drop goals, 184 points on aggregate. He was called for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, playing in the games with Scotland and Italy, without scoring.",
"score": "1.6232219"
}
] | [
"Pedro Ferreira-Mendes\n Pedro Ferreira-Mendes (born May 13, 1990) is a Brazilian footballer who most recently played for Puerto Rico FC of the North American Soccer League. He has previously played for the Atlanta Silverbacks, Indy Eleven, and Minnesota United FC in the NASL.",
"Pedro Ferreira-Mendes\n In December 2013, Ferreira-Mendes signed for North American Soccer League side Indy Eleven. On August 15, 2014, Ferreira-Mendes moved from Indy Eleven to fellow NASL side Minnesota United FC. On July 8, 2015, Ferreira-Mendes signed, along with his twin brother Paulo, with the Atlanta Silverbacks. Ferreira-Mendes was released by Puerto Rico FC at the end of their 2016 season.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)\n Pedro Rafael Amado Mendes (born 6 December 1993) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder and is currently a free agent.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born April 1990)\n Born in Guimarães, Mendes played youth football for four different clubs, including two spells with local Vitória Sport Clube. He made his senior debut in 2009 with Gondomar S.C. in the third level and, after two seasons, signed with Cypriot Second Division team Doxa Katokopias FC. In the summer of 2012, Mendes joined PSFC Chernomorets Burgas. His input for the Bulgarians consisted of 22 minutes in a 1–3 away loss against PFC Lokomotiv Sofia for the Bulgarian Cup, and he was released at the end of the campaign. In the following years, Mendes competed in the Portuguese third tier, with F.C. Lixa and Varzim SC.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)\n On 26 October 2020, it was confirmed that Mendes had signed with Hong Kong Premier League club Southern. On 21 May 2021, Mendes left the club due to injury.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)\n Pedro Filipe Teodósio Mendes (born 1 October 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Ligue 1 club Montpellier HSC as a central defender.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)\n Returning to Sporting for the 2012–13 campaign, Mendes was made captain of the reserves who competed in the second tier, also appearing sporadically for the main squad. On 28 May 2013, he signed a five-year contract with Parma F.C. in Serie A as a free agent. On 21 January 2014, Mendes moved to fellow league club U.S. Sassuolo Calcio in a co-ownership deal with Parma. In June he was bought by the latter, who sold Raman Chibsah and Nicola Sansone to the former on the same day.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)\n Mendes won his first cap for Portugal at under-21 level on 11 October 2019, in a 4–2 away loss against the Netherlands in the 2021 UEFA European Championship qualifiers where he replaced A.C. Milan's Rafael Leão.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)\n Born in Guimarães, Mendes started his youth career with local clubs Vitória S.C. and Moreirense F.C. before joining Sporting CP's academy at the age of 18. On 19 September 2019, after having scored seven goals in six games for the under-23 side to start the new season and before he had made his debut with the first team in the Primeira Liga due to registration problems, he appeared with the latter in a group stage match in the UEFA Europa League against PSV Eindhoven, and found the net immediately after having come as an 81st-minute substitute for fellow youth graduate Miguel Luís, albeit in a 3–2 away defeat; in the process, he became Sporting's first player ",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born April 1990)\n Pedro Miguel Alves Mendes (born 16 April 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Porto D'Ave as a left winger.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1999)\n Pedro Manuel Lobo Peixoto Mineiro Mendes (born 1 August 1999) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a striker for Rio Ave on loan from Sporting CP.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)\n Born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, to Portuguese parents, Mendes reached Sporting CP's youth system in 2005, aged nearly 15. In his first two senior seasons he played with Real SC (third division) and Servette FC (Switzerland, second level), in both cases on loan, helping the latter club to promotion. In the summer of 2011, still owned by Sporting, Mendes joined Real Madrid, being assigned to the B team. On 7 December 2011 he made his debut with the main squad, coming on as a substitute for Álvaro Arbeloa midway through the second half of a 3–0 away win against AFC Ajax in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League; during his spell with the Merengues, several of his Castilla teammates expressed their dissatisfaction over what they saw as a preferential treatment by first-team manager José Mourinho, the player's compatriot.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born October 1990)\n Mendes won exactly 50 caps for Portugal at youth level, including 13 for the under-21 team for whom he scored in a 1–1 home draw against Poland for the 2013 UEFA European Championship qualifiers. His maiden full appearance occurred on 14 October 2018, when he replaced S.L. Benfica's Rúben Dias in the 56th minute of the 3–1 friendly victory over Scotland at Hampden Park.",
"Jone Pedro\n Pedro lived in the Netherlands and Portugal as a child and is the son of Adriano Pedro, who was an Angolan national team basketball player.",
"Joaquim Ferreira (rugby union)\n The Portuguese prop played all his career for CDUP, since he was 17 years old. He is currently the most capped player from his country, having played 84 games for Portugal national team, with 3 tries scored, 15 points in aggregate, from 1993 to 2007. His first match was on April 3, 1993, in a 41-13 loss to Romania, in Lisbon. Ferreira played in three games at the 2007 Rugby World Cup, scoring a try against Romania, in a 14-10 loss, in what would be his last competitive match. He was the captain of that same game due to Vasco Uva's absence. He retired from rugby after the tournament, aged 34. He was assistant coach to Tomaz Morais in the Portuguese national team. He was nominated head coach of CDUP for the 2008/2009 season.",
"Pedro Mendes (footballer, born 1993)\n Born in Barreiro, Setúbal District of Angolan descent, Mendes spent the vast majority of his career in the Portuguese lower leagues. He joined Primeira Liga club Vitória F.C. as a 16-year-old, making his Primeira Liga debut with the first team on 6 November 2011 when he came on as a second-half substitute in a 0–0 home draw against Gil Vicente FC, being subsequently praised by manager Bruno Ribeiro. Mendes also had a brief spell in the Angolan Girabola, with C.R.D. Libolo.",
"Pedro Ferreira (footballer, born 1998)\n Pedro Miguel Dinis Ferreira (born 5 January 1998) is a Portuguese footballer who plays as a midfielder for AaB.",
"Pedro Castro (racquetball)\n Castro is also an accomplished baseball player, and has competed in four seasons of the Ligue de baseball majeur du Québec. In 2017, his first of three seasons with Acton Vale, Castro won the league championship. He played with Montreal in the 2020 season. Castro's mother is Chilean, which makes him eligible for the Chile national baseball team. He hopes to play at the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile.",
"Paulo Mendes\n Paulo Ferreira-Mendes (born May 13, 1990) is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Puerto Rico FC in the North American Soccer League.",
"Pedro Cabral (rugby union)\n Pedro Cabral (born 29 June 1983 in Lisbon) is a Portuguese rugby union player. He plays as a fly-half and as a fullback. He is currently a member of CDUL. He also plays for Lusitanos XV for the Amlin Challenge Cup. He has 37 caps for Portugal, from 2006 to 2011, with 2 tries, 24 conversions, 37 penalties and 5 drop goals, 184 points on aggregate. He was called for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, playing in the games with Scotland and Italy, without scoring."
] |
What sport does E Sour El Ghozlane play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | E Sour El Ghozlane | 3,972,148 | 82 | [
{
"id": "12408924",
"title": "Sour El-Ghozlane",
"text": " Sour El-Ghozlane (or Souk El Ghoziane) is a town and commune in Algeria's central-northern, just-landlocked Bouïra Province. According to the 1998 census it has a population of 42,179.",
"score": "1.7451464"
},
{
"id": "12408931",
"title": "Sour El-Ghozlane",
"text": " The poets Djamel Amrani (1935-2005), Messaour Boulanouar (1933), Kaddour M'Hamsadji (1933) and Arezki Metref (1952) are natives of Sour El-Ghozlane and M'hamed Aoune lived there. Mourad Kaouah (1919-1989) and the French actor Jean-Claude Brialy (1933-2007) were also born there. In La Chimère and the Gui (ed. Of the Writers, 2002) General Norbert Molinier speaks at length about his childhood in Aumale. A text by Jean Sénac entitled Poetry by Sour-El-Ghozlane was published in 1981 by L'Orycte, and reprinted in Jean Sénac Conrad Detrez and Vital Lahaye taught in the early 1970s at El-Ghazali High School in Sour El-Ghozlane.",
"score": "1.7268187"
},
{
"id": "5238763",
"title": "Ghizlane Chebbak",
"text": " Chebbak has played for ASFAR in Morocco.",
"score": "1.6419842"
},
{
"id": "4523616",
"title": "Tadamon Sour SC",
"text": " Tadamon Sour plays Salam Sour in the Tyre derby. The club also plays the South derby with Ghazieh, based on their location.",
"score": "1.6020175"
},
{
"id": "12408930",
"title": "Sour El-Ghozlane",
"text": " Sour El Ghozlane served under the French as a military post from 1845 and received the name of Aumale in honor of the Duke of Aumale, son of Louis Philippe.",
"score": "1.5732622"
},
{
"id": "5238819",
"title": "Ghizlane Chhiri",
"text": " Chhiri has played for ASFAR in Morocco.",
"score": "1.5592251"
},
{
"id": "9358568",
"title": "Sour El Ghozlane District",
"text": "Sour El-Ghozlane ; Maamora ; Ridane ; El Hakimia ; Dechmia ; Dirrah The district is further divided into 6 municipalities:",
"score": "1.5433121"
},
{
"id": "26383559",
"title": "Stephanie El Kazzi",
"text": " El Kazzi played for Zouk Mosbeh, before moving to EFP.",
"score": "1.5390017"
},
{
"id": "4566837",
"title": "Imène El Ghazouani",
"text": " El Ghazouani has played for La Rochette Vaux le Pénil FC, VGA Saint-Maur and Yzeure in France.",
"score": "1.5388222"
},
{
"id": "9358567",
"title": "Sour El Ghozlane District",
"text": " Sour El Ghozlane District is a district of Bouïra Province, Algeria.",
"score": "1.5375388"
},
{
"id": "3474489",
"title": "Mohamed Gamal-el-Din",
"text": " Mohamed Gamal-el-Din (محمد جمال الدين, born 13 April 1972) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre back. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics as the team captain. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"score": "1.5310963"
},
{
"id": "30440239",
"title": "Muhannad El Tahir",
"text": " Muhannad El Tahir (مهند الطاهر) born December 3, 1984) is a Sudanese footballer. He currently plays as a striker for the Sudanese Premier League club Al-Hilal and the Sudanese national team. He has been one of the most talented players in Sudan. El Tahir was transferred from Al-Merghani of Kassala in 2004. He is good in free-kicks and dribbling with pace. His shot power is very powerful and dangerous with his left foot. The fans call him Al-Ghezal, which means \"the deer\" in Arabic. He wears the number 10 shirt for Al-Hilal. He caught the eyes of many scouts during the 2012 African Cup of Nations as he played an important role, assisting goals for the team during the tournament.",
"score": "1.5216944"
},
{
"id": "15760757",
"title": "Miliana",
"text": " The game of El Koura is a traditional game that was played in Miliana, Laghouat and other places prior to French colonization. Similar to association football, the game was played during the spring and times of extreme drought because it was believed to bring rain. After French colonization, European sports, especially association football, became more popular. The town is home to Algerian club football team S.C. Miliana.",
"score": "1.5198085"
},
{
"id": "3791176",
"title": "Shady El-Helw",
"text": " Shady El Helw (شادي الحلو, born 7 February 1979) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre forward. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"score": "1.514744"
},
{
"id": "6240896",
"title": "Omar Fonstad el Ghaouti",
"text": " Omar Fonstad el Ghaouti (born 15 February 1990) is a Norwegian futsal player and football striker who plays for Alta. Hailing from Stovner in Oslo, he is of Norwegian and Moroccan descent. After playing for Stabæk U20 he played for four clubs in and around Oslo before making his way to Malta in 2012. A journeyman footballer, he also won 17 caps for the Norwegian national futsal team in 2014 and 2015.",
"score": "1.5132365"
},
{
"id": "1208005",
"title": "Adam El-Abd",
"text": " Born in Brighton, East Sussex, to an Egyptian father and a British mother, El-Abd holds dual-nationality. His older brother Joe played professional rugby union and is a coach at Castres Olympique. His younger brother Sami was an apprentice at Brighton, before moving to non-League football with Crawley Town, Hayes & Yeading United, Whitehawk, Bognor Regis Town and now plays for Dorking Wanderers.",
"score": "1.5129881"
},
{
"id": "14662920",
"title": "Khaled El Ghandour",
"text": " Participate during playing football in the provision of some episodes on the Nile Variety channel, then turn El Ghandour Media Sports and achieved little success in season 2006/2007 in his Gul FM radio, and finally presents the sports program \"Sports Day\".",
"score": "1.5062363"
},
{
"id": "5289010",
"title": "Ali Ghazal",
"text": " Ali Ahmed Ali Mohamed Ghazal (علي أحمد علي محمد غزال; born 1 February 1992) is an Egyptian professional footballer who last played as a defensive midfielder or as a centre back for Egyptian Premier League side Smouha and the Egypt national team. He began his career as a youth player with El Sekka El Hadid before joining Wadi Degla in 2006. In 2013, despite having not played a senior game, he was sold to Portuguese club Nacional where he made his professional debut. After establishing himself in the first team, he was later named captain of the club, becoming the first Egyptian player to captain a top-tier European team. He joined Chinese side Guizhou Zhicheng in 2017 but changes to the league's foreign player quota resulted in him never playing a league match and his contract was cancelled by mutual consent. Following his release, he joined Vancouver in 2017, helping the side reach the MLS Cup Playoffs in his first season. In May 2013, Ghazal was called up for the Egyptian national team, making his international debut a year later.",
"score": "1.5060654"
},
{
"id": "11374927",
"title": "Ayoub El Yaghlane",
"text": " Ayoub El Yaghlane (born 10 March 1997) is a Belgian football free agent who most recently played as a defender for A.F.C. Tubize in the Belgian First Division B.",
"score": "1.5003276"
},
{
"id": "30836430",
"title": "Ghizlane Toudali",
"text": " Ghizlane Toudali (غزلان تودالي; born February 16, 1984) is a Moroccan taekwondo practitioner. Toudali qualified for the women's 49 kg class at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after placing second from the African Qualification Tournament in Tripoli, Libya. She lost the preliminary round of sixteen match to Iran's Sara Khoshjamal, who was able to score five points at the end of the game.",
"score": "1.4999115"
}
] | [
"Sour El-Ghozlane\n Sour El-Ghozlane (or Souk El Ghoziane) is a town and commune in Algeria's central-northern, just-landlocked Bouïra Province. According to the 1998 census it has a population of 42,179.",
"Sour El-Ghozlane\n The poets Djamel Amrani (1935-2005), Messaour Boulanouar (1933), Kaddour M'Hamsadji (1933) and Arezki Metref (1952) are natives of Sour El-Ghozlane and M'hamed Aoune lived there. Mourad Kaouah (1919-1989) and the French actor Jean-Claude Brialy (1933-2007) were also born there. In La Chimère and the Gui (ed. Of the Writers, 2002) General Norbert Molinier speaks at length about his childhood in Aumale. A text by Jean Sénac entitled Poetry by Sour-El-Ghozlane was published in 1981 by L'Orycte, and reprinted in Jean Sénac Conrad Detrez and Vital Lahaye taught in the early 1970s at El-Ghazali High School in Sour El-Ghozlane.",
"Ghizlane Chebbak\n Chebbak has played for ASFAR in Morocco.",
"Tadamon Sour SC\n Tadamon Sour plays Salam Sour in the Tyre derby. The club also plays the South derby with Ghazieh, based on their location.",
"Sour El-Ghozlane\n Sour El Ghozlane served under the French as a military post from 1845 and received the name of Aumale in honor of the Duke of Aumale, son of Louis Philippe.",
"Ghizlane Chhiri\n Chhiri has played for ASFAR in Morocco.",
"Sour El Ghozlane District\nSour El-Ghozlane ; Maamora ; Ridane ; El Hakimia ; Dechmia ; Dirrah The district is further divided into 6 municipalities:",
"Stephanie El Kazzi\n El Kazzi played for Zouk Mosbeh, before moving to EFP.",
"Imène El Ghazouani\n El Ghazouani has played for La Rochette Vaux le Pénil FC, VGA Saint-Maur and Yzeure in France.",
"Sour El Ghozlane District\n Sour El Ghozlane District is a district of Bouïra Province, Algeria.",
"Mohamed Gamal-el-Din\n Mohamed Gamal-el-Din (محمد جمال الدين, born 13 April 1972) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre back. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics as the team captain. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"Muhannad El Tahir\n Muhannad El Tahir (مهند الطاهر) born December 3, 1984) is a Sudanese footballer. He currently plays as a striker for the Sudanese Premier League club Al-Hilal and the Sudanese national team. He has been one of the most talented players in Sudan. El Tahir was transferred from Al-Merghani of Kassala in 2004. He is good in free-kicks and dribbling with pace. His shot power is very powerful and dangerous with his left foot. The fans call him Al-Ghezal, which means \"the deer\" in Arabic. He wears the number 10 shirt for Al-Hilal. He caught the eyes of many scouts during the 2012 African Cup of Nations as he played an important role, assisting goals for the team during the tournament.",
"Miliana\n The game of El Koura is a traditional game that was played in Miliana, Laghouat and other places prior to French colonization. Similar to association football, the game was played during the spring and times of extreme drought because it was believed to bring rain. After French colonization, European sports, especially association football, became more popular. The town is home to Algerian club football team S.C. Miliana.",
"Shady El-Helw\n Shady El Helw (شادي الحلو, born 7 February 1979) is an Egyptian male water polo player. He was a member of the Egypt men's national water polo team, playing as a centre forward. He was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics. On club level he played for Heliopolis in Egypt.",
"Omar Fonstad el Ghaouti\n Omar Fonstad el Ghaouti (born 15 February 1990) is a Norwegian futsal player and football striker who plays for Alta. Hailing from Stovner in Oslo, he is of Norwegian and Moroccan descent. After playing for Stabæk U20 he played for four clubs in and around Oslo before making his way to Malta in 2012. A journeyman footballer, he also won 17 caps for the Norwegian national futsal team in 2014 and 2015.",
"Adam El-Abd\n Born in Brighton, East Sussex, to an Egyptian father and a British mother, El-Abd holds dual-nationality. His older brother Joe played professional rugby union and is a coach at Castres Olympique. His younger brother Sami was an apprentice at Brighton, before moving to non-League football with Crawley Town, Hayes & Yeading United, Whitehawk, Bognor Regis Town and now plays for Dorking Wanderers.",
"Khaled El Ghandour\n Participate during playing football in the provision of some episodes on the Nile Variety channel, then turn El Ghandour Media Sports and achieved little success in season 2006/2007 in his Gul FM radio, and finally presents the sports program \"Sports Day\".",
"Ali Ghazal\n Ali Ahmed Ali Mohamed Ghazal (علي أحمد علي محمد غزال; born 1 February 1992) is an Egyptian professional footballer who last played as a defensive midfielder or as a centre back for Egyptian Premier League side Smouha and the Egypt national team. He began his career as a youth player with El Sekka El Hadid before joining Wadi Degla in 2006. In 2013, despite having not played a senior game, he was sold to Portuguese club Nacional where he made his professional debut. After establishing himself in the first team, he was later named captain of the club, becoming the first Egyptian player to captain a top-tier European team. He joined Chinese side Guizhou Zhicheng in 2017 but changes to the league's foreign player quota resulted in him never playing a league match and his contract was cancelled by mutual consent. Following his release, he joined Vancouver in 2017, helping the side reach the MLS Cup Playoffs in his first season. In May 2013, Ghazal was called up for the Egyptian national team, making his international debut a year later.",
"Ayoub El Yaghlane\n Ayoub El Yaghlane (born 10 March 1997) is a Belgian football free agent who most recently played as a defender for A.F.C. Tubize in the Belgian First Division B.",
"Ghizlane Toudali\n Ghizlane Toudali (غزلان تودالي; born February 16, 1984) is a Moroccan taekwondo practitioner. Toudali qualified for the women's 49 kg class at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after placing second from the African Qualification Tournament in Tripoli, Libya. She lost the preliminary round of sixteen match to Iran's Sara Khoshjamal, who was able to score five points at the end of the game."
] |
What sport does Lek Kcira play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Lek Kćira | 4,942,296 | 72 | [
{
"id": "3997464",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": " Lek Kćira (born 28 January 1983) is a Croatian football player of Kosovar Albanian descent. Kćira mainly plays as central defender and he currently plays for ASKÖ Oberdorf in Austria.",
"score": "1.988255"
},
{
"id": "3997465",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": " Kcira played for Hrvatski Dragovoljac in Croatia in 2002. He then went on to play in Poland in 2005 with Górnik Łęczna. After a two-year spell in Poland he decided on a move back to his first club NK Hrvatski Dragovoljac. After one season he moved to NK Varteks in the top division, he played for the club for the first half of the 2007–2008 season.",
"score": "1.9586424"
},
{
"id": "3997468",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": " He had signed one-year contract with Malaysia Super League team Kelantan for 2013 season. He will be the 4th foreign player for the team to play in the 2013 AFC Cup. In 2016 he played for NK Međimurje in the Croatian league.",
"score": "1.951742"
},
{
"id": "3997467",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": " After a short time in HNK Gorica, Kcira transferred to Iranian club Steel Azin enjoyed playon there by scoring 2 goals in 19 matches. On the next seasons, he moved to Shahin Bushehr to work with his past manager Hamid Estili.",
"score": "1.7842224"
},
{
"id": "3997466",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": " He joined KF Tirana on 1 February 2008. During the rest of the 2007–2008 campaign he became a first team regular and made 13 appearances scoring one goal. Kcira started the 2008–2009 season brightly but he only managed to play 8 league games due to injury.",
"score": "1.6759245"
},
{
"id": "3997469",
"title": "Lek Kćira",
"text": "Shahin Bushehr ; Hazfi Cup Runner up: 2011–12 ",
"score": "1.5766988"
},
{
"id": "15236834",
"title": "Kellokosken Alku",
"text": " Kellokosken Alku (abbreviated KelA) is a sports club from Kellokoski, Finland. The club was formed in 1926 as Woimistelu and Urheiluseura Alku. It has specialised in athletics, skiing, gymnastics, wrestling, boxing, pesäpallo, cycling, football, volleyball, basketball, bandy, table tennis, swimming, orienteering, weight lifting, ice hockey, and floorball. Football and ice hockey are the two most popular sports. The men's football team currently plays in the Vitonen (Fifth Division) and their home ground is at the Kellokosken nurmi. The ice hockey team plays in the Second Division South, the fourth tier of Finnish ice-hockey. The Club chairman is Kyösti Lehtonen.",
"score": "1.5453317"
},
{
"id": "3059808",
"title": "Pako Lekgari",
"text": " Born in Kayne, Lekgari has played club football for Botswana Meat Commission, Uniao Flamengo Santos, Black Peril, Black Africa, Township Rollers, Jwaneng Galaxy and Security Systems. He made his international debut for Botswana in 2013.",
"score": "1.4847505"
},
{
"id": "1942282",
"title": "KKS Wiara Lecha Poznań",
"text": " The club has founded a rugby union section in 2020 on the basis of NKR Chaos Poznań, an amateur club founded by Lech supporters in 2001. The new section debuted in a rugby sevens Polish Cup tournament in June 2020.",
"score": "1.483937"
},
{
"id": "31681368",
"title": "Al-Duhail SC",
"text": " Al-Duhail Sports Club (نادي الدحيل الرياضي), formerly Lekhwiya SC, is a Qatari sports club, best known for its football team, which plays in the Qatar Stars League. The club is based in the Duhail district in the city of Doha and plays its home games at Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium. It is the first team in Qatari football to win the first division title on its debut season. In April 2017, it was announced that the club would take over El Jaish SC and merge with following the 2016–17 Qatar Stars League and be known as Al-Duhail Sports Club in rebranding of Lekhwiya SC.",
"score": "1.4643652"
},
{
"id": "1649783",
"title": "Robert Baggio Kcira",
"text": " Robert Baggio Kcira began his youth career playing in New York for Clarkstown FC's youth squad where he still holds multiple records for scoring and assists. Kcira was selected to play for the NY State Olympic Development Program (ODP). While playing for ODP, Baggio was invited to play for the U.S. Regional 1 team and then soon selected for the U.S. National Pool. From there, he joined the New York Red Bulls Academy team where he played tournaments in Barcelona, Texas, and other major venues around the globe.",
"score": "1.4569285"
},
{
"id": "1649785",
"title": "Robert Baggio Kcira",
"text": " In January 2016, Kcira signed professionally for North American Soccer League side Miami FC, where he was assigned the number 14 shirt. Miami FC is coached by former Italian World Cup winning defender Alessandro Nesta. After a short 2016 season in which he played 20 minutes in total, Kcira started 2017 by making 11 appearances and scoring twice for Miami as the team dominated the league (on route to winning both the Spring and Fall seasons). His first goal came against North Carolina FC on April 22, 2017 when he scored late in stoppage time to tie the game, 1-1. An ACL and meniscus injury midway through the year ended his season early. Following the end of the 2017 season and the subsequent cancellation of the 2018 NASL ",
"score": "1.4348156"
},
{
"id": "9763735",
"title": "Bukkoree Lemdee",
"text": " Bukkoree learned to play football in the youth team of Chonburi. It was here that he signed his first professional contract in 2021. The club from Chonburi played in the country's first division, the Thai League. He made his professional debut on March 14, 2021 in the away game at Port Here he was in the starting line-up. In the 61st minute he was replaced because of an injury against Channarong Promsrikaew.",
"score": "1.429274"
},
{
"id": "3937539",
"title": "Leki Dukpa",
"text": " Leki Dukpa is a Bhutanese international footballer, who currently plays for Thimphu City. He made his first appearance for the Bhutan national football team in 2012.",
"score": "1.4108965"
},
{
"id": "1942281",
"title": "KKS Wiara Lecha Poznań",
"text": " In September 2019 a new basketball section was created in order to restore the past basketball glories of Lech Poznań. They won their first match in round three of the local third division, the lowest league in the pyramid.",
"score": "1.4075301"
},
{
"id": "10881225",
"title": "King City Secondary School",
"text": "Football ; Baseball ; Hockey ; Basketball ; Volleyball ; Soccer ; Ultimate Frisbee ; Golf ; Curling ; Cheerleading ; Track and Field ; Skiing Sports teams from KCSS are part of the York Region Athletics Association, which coordinates all competitive sports activities in York Region. KCSS competes and has competed in various sports including: Non-competitive school intramural sports leagues, organized and scheduled by the Athletic Council and senior physical and health education students, have active participation. Most events occur during the lunch period. The school's football teams are known as the \"Lions\". The junior team won the York Region championship in ",
"score": "1.4059963"
},
{
"id": "13976895",
"title": "Lembo Saysana",
"text": " Thanongsak Homlathsame (born 26 February 1998) is a Laotian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for the Laotian national team and Electricite du Laos club. In February 2020, the Asian Football Confederation banned him from football for life for match manipulation.",
"score": "1.4011221"
},
{
"id": "1649786",
"title": "Robert Baggio Kcira",
"text": " Kcira did not return to Miami FC as the team explored options to continue play. In January 2019 it was announced the Kcira had returned to the club for its second season in the National Premier Soccer League, a semi-professional league generally considered the fourth tier of American soccer, where he made one appearance in the season opener against Miami United FC as the team went on to win a second NPSL National Championship. Kcira remained on the roster as Miami FC returned to professional play in the newly created National Independent Soccer Association (NISA) but did not play in any of the team's Fall 2019 games. On June 6, 2021, Kcira returned to Miami for a third stint with the team now playing in the USL Championship.",
"score": "1.4003855"
},
{
"id": "3327419",
"title": "Apiwich Phulek",
"text": " Apiwich Phulek (อภิวิชฐ์ ภู่เล็ก, born February 5, 1988 as Jetsada Phulek), simply known as Lek (เล็ก), is a Thai professional footballer who plays as a Winger. He has featured for the Thai Port first team in the 2009 season mainly as a left winger.",
"score": "1.396502"
},
{
"id": "9167001",
"title": "Isaiah LeFlore",
"text": " Isaiah LeFlore (born December 11, 2002) is an American professional soccer player who plays for Sporting Kansas City II in the USL Championship via the Sporting Kansas City Academy.",
"score": "1.3932154"
}
] | [
"Lek Kćira\n Lek Kćira (born 28 January 1983) is a Croatian football player of Kosovar Albanian descent. Kćira mainly plays as central defender and he currently plays for ASKÖ Oberdorf in Austria.",
"Lek Kćira\n Kcira played for Hrvatski Dragovoljac in Croatia in 2002. He then went on to play in Poland in 2005 with Górnik Łęczna. After a two-year spell in Poland he decided on a move back to his first club NK Hrvatski Dragovoljac. After one season he moved to NK Varteks in the top division, he played for the club for the first half of the 2007–2008 season.",
"Lek Kćira\n He had signed one-year contract with Malaysia Super League team Kelantan for 2013 season. He will be the 4th foreign player for the team to play in the 2013 AFC Cup. In 2016 he played for NK Međimurje in the Croatian league.",
"Lek Kćira\n After a short time in HNK Gorica, Kcira transferred to Iranian club Steel Azin enjoyed playon there by scoring 2 goals in 19 matches. On the next seasons, he moved to Shahin Bushehr to work with his past manager Hamid Estili.",
"Lek Kćira\n He joined KF Tirana on 1 February 2008. During the rest of the 2007–2008 campaign he became a first team regular and made 13 appearances scoring one goal. Kcira started the 2008–2009 season brightly but he only managed to play 8 league games due to injury.",
"Lek Kćira\nShahin Bushehr ; Hazfi Cup Runner up: 2011–12 ",
"Kellokosken Alku\n Kellokosken Alku (abbreviated KelA) is a sports club from Kellokoski, Finland. The club was formed in 1926 as Woimistelu and Urheiluseura Alku. It has specialised in athletics, skiing, gymnastics, wrestling, boxing, pesäpallo, cycling, football, volleyball, basketball, bandy, table tennis, swimming, orienteering, weight lifting, ice hockey, and floorball. Football and ice hockey are the two most popular sports. The men's football team currently plays in the Vitonen (Fifth Division) and their home ground is at the Kellokosken nurmi. The ice hockey team plays in the Second Division South, the fourth tier of Finnish ice-hockey. The Club chairman is Kyösti Lehtonen.",
"Pako Lekgari\n Born in Kayne, Lekgari has played club football for Botswana Meat Commission, Uniao Flamengo Santos, Black Peril, Black Africa, Township Rollers, Jwaneng Galaxy and Security Systems. He made his international debut for Botswana in 2013.",
"KKS Wiara Lecha Poznań\n The club has founded a rugby union section in 2020 on the basis of NKR Chaos Poznań, an amateur club founded by Lech supporters in 2001. The new section debuted in a rugby sevens Polish Cup tournament in June 2020.",
"Al-Duhail SC\n Al-Duhail Sports Club (نادي الدحيل الرياضي), formerly Lekhwiya SC, is a Qatari sports club, best known for its football team, which plays in the Qatar Stars League. The club is based in the Duhail district in the city of Doha and plays its home games at Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium. It is the first team in Qatari football to win the first division title on its debut season. In April 2017, it was announced that the club would take over El Jaish SC and merge with following the 2016–17 Qatar Stars League and be known as Al-Duhail Sports Club in rebranding of Lekhwiya SC.",
"Robert Baggio Kcira\n Robert Baggio Kcira began his youth career playing in New York for Clarkstown FC's youth squad where he still holds multiple records for scoring and assists. Kcira was selected to play for the NY State Olympic Development Program (ODP). While playing for ODP, Baggio was invited to play for the U.S. Regional 1 team and then soon selected for the U.S. National Pool. From there, he joined the New York Red Bulls Academy team where he played tournaments in Barcelona, Texas, and other major venues around the globe.",
"Robert Baggio Kcira\n In January 2016, Kcira signed professionally for North American Soccer League side Miami FC, where he was assigned the number 14 shirt. Miami FC is coached by former Italian World Cup winning defender Alessandro Nesta. After a short 2016 season in which he played 20 minutes in total, Kcira started 2017 by making 11 appearances and scoring twice for Miami as the team dominated the league (on route to winning both the Spring and Fall seasons). His first goal came against North Carolina FC on April 22, 2017 when he scored late in stoppage time to tie the game, 1-1. An ACL and meniscus injury midway through the year ended his season early. Following the end of the 2017 season and the subsequent cancellation of the 2018 NASL ",
"Bukkoree Lemdee\n Bukkoree learned to play football in the youth team of Chonburi. It was here that he signed his first professional contract in 2021. The club from Chonburi played in the country's first division, the Thai League. He made his professional debut on March 14, 2021 in the away game at Port Here he was in the starting line-up. In the 61st minute he was replaced because of an injury against Channarong Promsrikaew.",
"Leki Dukpa\n Leki Dukpa is a Bhutanese international footballer, who currently plays for Thimphu City. He made his first appearance for the Bhutan national football team in 2012.",
"KKS Wiara Lecha Poznań\n In September 2019 a new basketball section was created in order to restore the past basketball glories of Lech Poznań. They won their first match in round three of the local third division, the lowest league in the pyramid.",
"King City Secondary School\nFootball ; Baseball ; Hockey ; Basketball ; Volleyball ; Soccer ; Ultimate Frisbee ; Golf ; Curling ; Cheerleading ; Track and Field ; Skiing Sports teams from KCSS are part of the York Region Athletics Association, which coordinates all competitive sports activities in York Region. KCSS competes and has competed in various sports including: Non-competitive school intramural sports leagues, organized and scheduled by the Athletic Council and senior physical and health education students, have active participation. Most events occur during the lunch period. The school's football teams are known as the \"Lions\". The junior team won the York Region championship in ",
"Lembo Saysana\n Thanongsak Homlathsame (born 26 February 1998) is a Laotian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for the Laotian national team and Electricite du Laos club. In February 2020, the Asian Football Confederation banned him from football for life for match manipulation.",
"Robert Baggio Kcira\n Kcira did not return to Miami FC as the team explored options to continue play. In January 2019 it was announced the Kcira had returned to the club for its second season in the National Premier Soccer League, a semi-professional league generally considered the fourth tier of American soccer, where he made one appearance in the season opener against Miami United FC as the team went on to win a second NPSL National Championship. Kcira remained on the roster as Miami FC returned to professional play in the newly created National Independent Soccer Association (NISA) but did not play in any of the team's Fall 2019 games. On June 6, 2021, Kcira returned to Miami for a third stint with the team now playing in the USL Championship.",
"Apiwich Phulek\n Apiwich Phulek (อภิวิชฐ์ ภู่เล็ก, born February 5, 1988 as Jetsada Phulek), simply known as Lek (เล็ก), is a Thai professional footballer who plays as a Winger. He has featured for the Thai Port first team in the 2009 season mainly as a left winger.",
"Isaiah LeFlore\n Isaiah LeFlore (born December 11, 2002) is an American professional soccer player who plays for Sporting Kansas City II in the USL Championship via the Sporting Kansas City Academy."
] |
What sport does Daniel Manzato play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Daniel Manzato | 6,340,057 | 92 | [
{
"id": "25967399",
"title": "Daniel Manzato",
"text": " Manzato participated at the 2010 IIHF World Championship as a member of the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team.",
"score": "1.9189757"
},
{
"id": "25967397",
"title": "Daniel Manzato",
"text": " Daniel Manzato (born 17 January 1984) is a Swiss professional ice hockey goaltender who currently plays for SC Bern in the National League (NL). He was drafted 160th overall in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft by the Carolina Hurricanes.",
"score": "1.9148798"
},
{
"id": "25967400",
"title": "Daniel Manzato",
"text": " Born and raised in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, he speaks German as well as Italian, being of Italian descent and having lived for about six years in the Italian-speaking Canton of Ticino.",
"score": "1.6135037"
},
{
"id": "9584398",
"title": "Manzato",
"text": "Daniel Manzato (born 1984), Swiss ice hockey player ; Franco Manzato (born 1966), Italian politician Manzato is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.5962012"
},
{
"id": "8892449",
"title": "Daniel Morillo",
"text": " Daniel Morillo (born January 21, 1988 in Ibiza) is an athlete from Spain, who competes in archery.",
"score": "1.5920901"
},
{
"id": "3791605",
"title": "Daniel Moro",
"text": " Daniel Moro (born 8 August 1973) is a Spanish male water polo player. He was a member of the Spain men's national water polo team, playing as a driver. He was a part of the team at the 2000 Summer Olympics and 2004 Summer Olympics. On club level he played for CN Atlètic-Barceloneta in Spain. He is the older brother of water polo player Iván Moro, who competed together with him at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics after winning the gold medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5771399"
},
{
"id": "2823955",
"title": "Daniel Semenzato",
"text": " Born in Montebelluna, Veneto, Semenzato started his career at Internazionale, as first as a midfielder, played from Giovanissimi Nazionali team to the top team of the youth rank – Primavera (from 2004 to 2006). He also played for the first team in friendlies in 2004–05, 2005–06 season and 2006–07 season.",
"score": "1.570086"
},
{
"id": "2823954",
"title": "Daniel Semenzato",
"text": " Daniel Semenzato (born 11 January 1987) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender for Bari.",
"score": "1.5490568"
},
{
"id": "2823959",
"title": "Daniel Semenzato",
"text": " In August 2010, he was sold to fellow Serie B team Cittadella. He was the understudy of Andrea Manucci but started as emergency right back at the first match of the season (also the first match in the cup). In the next match, the opening match of Cittadella in Serie B, coach Claudio Foscarini used Gianluca Nocentini as right back instead. On 31 January 2011, Semenzato was signed by Como.",
"score": "1.5437506"
},
{
"id": "4130586",
"title": "Adrian Carambula",
"text": " Adrian Ignacio Carambula Raurich (born 16 March 1988) is a Uruguay-born italian beach volleyball player. Born in Uruguay, he played football alongside Luis Suárez as a boy, until his family moved to Florida when he was a teenager. He qualifies to represent Italy through his maternal grandmother, originally from Turin. He is known as \"Mr Skyball\" for his unique serving style, in which he hits the ball high. The theme from the James Bond film Skyfall plays when he serves. Ranked third in the world as a pair, Carambula partnered Alex Ranghieri at the 2016 Olympics. Since 2018, Carambula plays together with Enrico Rossi.",
"score": "1.5416441"
},
{
"id": "2823957",
"title": "Daniel Semenzato",
"text": " In July 2009, he was signed by Serie B club Frosinone as free agent. He made his club debut on 15 August 2009, the second match of the season and of the Cup. He was the starting right back in that narrowly win Serie A club Bologna by penalty shootout. But in the next match, he lost the starting place to Lorenzo Del Prete on 21 August, the opening match of Frosinone in Serie B. Semenzato replaced left midfielder Simone Basso in the 81st minute on that match. That match Frosinone winning Salernitana 2–1. He waited until round 5 to play his first match as starter, due to Del Prete was unavailable in the last minute. He started again in round 13 (7 November 2009) against Gallipoli due to Del Prete's fitness and again in round 15 (28 November 2009), and from round 21 (9 January ",
"score": "1.5414915"
},
{
"id": "5080070",
"title": "Daniel López (water polo)",
"text": " Daniel López Pinedo (born 16 July 1980 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo goalkeeper who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in two Summer Olympics (2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"score": "1.533875"
},
{
"id": "14613228",
"title": "Daniel Mancini",
"text": " Daniel Mancini (born 11 November 1996) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a winger for Greek Super League club Aris.",
"score": "1.5337782"
},
{
"id": "30746956",
"title": "Daniel Manz",
"text": " Daniel Manz (born September 12, 1987 in Kempten im Allgäu, Bavaria) is a German taekwondo practitioner. He won a silver medal for the 68 kg division at the 2008 European Taekwondo Championships in Rome, Italy. Manz is also the husband of two-time Olympic taekwondo jin Sümeyye Gülec. Manz qualified for the men's 68 kg class at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after placing second from the European Qualification Tournament in Istanbul, Turkey. He defeated Kyrgyzstan's Rasul Abduraim in the preliminary round of sixteen, before losing out the quarterfinal match to U.S. taekwondo jin Mark López, with a score of 1–3. Because his opponent advanced further into the final match, Manz took advantage of the repechage round by defeating Afghanistan's Nesar Ahmad Bahave. He progressed to the bronze medal match, but narrowly lost the medal to Chinese Taipei's Sung Yu-Chi, with a sudden death score of 3–4.",
"score": "1.5253854"
},
{
"id": "30666741",
"title": "Lucas Daniel",
"text": " Lucas Daniel (born January 1, 1995) is a French competitive archer. He attained a fourth-place finish in the men's team recurve at the 2015 European Games, and eventually competed as a member of the French archery squad at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Daniel was selected to compete for the French squad at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, shooting in both individual and team recurve tournaments. First, Daniel amassed 666 points out of a maximum 720 to obtain a twenty-first seed heading to the knockout stage, along with his team's score of 2,003 collected from the classification round. Sitting at fifth in the men's team recurve, Daniel and his compatriots Pierre Plihon and Jean-Charles Valladont confidently beat the Malaysians in the opening round with a 2–6, before they faced a quarterfinal match against Australia, which led to the trio's untimely demise from the competition through a tough 3–5 defeat. In the men's individual recurve, Daniel succumbed to the reigning European Games champion Miguel Alvariño of Spain, who scored straight-set victories in the opening round.",
"score": "1.523607"
},
{
"id": "3676551",
"title": "Daniel Farabello",
"text": " A member of the senior men's Argentine national basketball team, he competed with the squad at the 1996 Summer Olympics and 2006 FIBA World Championship.",
"score": "1.5199776"
},
{
"id": "25967398",
"title": "Daniel Manzato",
"text": " During the 2014–15 season, on January 5, 2015, Manzato signed a three-year contract extension to the remain in Lugano until 2018. Manzato joined HC Ambrì-Piotta for the 2018/19 season on a two-year deal. On December 12, 2019, in his final year of his contract with Ambri, Manzato agreed to a one-year deal with Genève-Servette HC for the 2020/21 season. On March 11, 2021, Manzato agreed to a one-year deal with SC Bern for the 2021/22 season.",
"score": "1.5158863"
},
{
"id": "9665360",
"title": "Daniel Fuzato",
"text": " Daniel Cerantola Fuzato (born 4 July 1997) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Serie A club Roma.",
"score": "1.5120893"
},
{
"id": "8449567",
"title": "Daniel Vargas (volleyball)",
"text": " During the summer of 2016, Vargas along with Mexico men's national volleyball team, ended their 48-year absence in the Olympic Games, when they secured the final place at stake for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games through the World Olympic Qualification Tournament, which took place in their home turf in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.5092888"
},
{
"id": "9665362",
"title": "Daniel Fuzato",
"text": " Fuzato was born in Brazil and is of Italian descent, and has both passports. Fuzato is a youth international for Brazil, having represented the Brazil U20s once in 2016. He has been called up to represent Brazil U23s and the senior Brazil squad in 2019.",
"score": "1.507963"
}
] | [
"Daniel Manzato\n Manzato participated at the 2010 IIHF World Championship as a member of the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team.",
"Daniel Manzato\n Daniel Manzato (born 17 January 1984) is a Swiss professional ice hockey goaltender who currently plays for SC Bern in the National League (NL). He was drafted 160th overall in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft by the Carolina Hurricanes.",
"Daniel Manzato\n Born and raised in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, he speaks German as well as Italian, being of Italian descent and having lived for about six years in the Italian-speaking Canton of Ticino.",
"Manzato\nDaniel Manzato (born 1984), Swiss ice hockey player ; Franco Manzato (born 1966), Italian politician Manzato is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Daniel Morillo\n Daniel Morillo (born January 21, 1988 in Ibiza) is an athlete from Spain, who competes in archery.",
"Daniel Moro\n Daniel Moro (born 8 August 1973) is a Spanish male water polo player. He was a member of the Spain men's national water polo team, playing as a driver. He was a part of the team at the 2000 Summer Olympics and 2004 Summer Olympics. On club level he played for CN Atlètic-Barceloneta in Spain. He is the older brother of water polo player Iván Moro, who competed together with him at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics after winning the gold medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics.",
"Daniel Semenzato\n Born in Montebelluna, Veneto, Semenzato started his career at Internazionale, as first as a midfielder, played from Giovanissimi Nazionali team to the top team of the youth rank – Primavera (from 2004 to 2006). He also played for the first team in friendlies in 2004–05, 2005–06 season and 2006–07 season.",
"Daniel Semenzato\n Daniel Semenzato (born 11 January 1987) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender for Bari.",
"Daniel Semenzato\n In August 2010, he was sold to fellow Serie B team Cittadella. He was the understudy of Andrea Manucci but started as emergency right back at the first match of the season (also the first match in the cup). In the next match, the opening match of Cittadella in Serie B, coach Claudio Foscarini used Gianluca Nocentini as right back instead. On 31 January 2011, Semenzato was signed by Como.",
"Adrian Carambula\n Adrian Ignacio Carambula Raurich (born 16 March 1988) is a Uruguay-born italian beach volleyball player. Born in Uruguay, he played football alongside Luis Suárez as a boy, until his family moved to Florida when he was a teenager. He qualifies to represent Italy through his maternal grandmother, originally from Turin. He is known as \"Mr Skyball\" for his unique serving style, in which he hits the ball high. The theme from the James Bond film Skyfall plays when he serves. Ranked third in the world as a pair, Carambula partnered Alex Ranghieri at the 2016 Olympics. Since 2018, Carambula plays together with Enrico Rossi.",
"Daniel Semenzato\n In July 2009, he was signed by Serie B club Frosinone as free agent. He made his club debut on 15 August 2009, the second match of the season and of the Cup. He was the starting right back in that narrowly win Serie A club Bologna by penalty shootout. But in the next match, he lost the starting place to Lorenzo Del Prete on 21 August, the opening match of Frosinone in Serie B. Semenzato replaced left midfielder Simone Basso in the 81st minute on that match. That match Frosinone winning Salernitana 2–1. He waited until round 5 to play his first match as starter, due to Del Prete was unavailable in the last minute. He started again in round 13 (7 November 2009) against Gallipoli due to Del Prete's fitness and again in round 15 (28 November 2009), and from round 21 (9 January ",
"Daniel López (water polo)\n Daniel López Pinedo (born 16 July 1980 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo goalkeeper who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in two Summer Olympics (2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"Daniel Mancini\n Daniel Mancini (born 11 November 1996) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a winger for Greek Super League club Aris.",
"Daniel Manz\n Daniel Manz (born September 12, 1987 in Kempten im Allgäu, Bavaria) is a German taekwondo practitioner. He won a silver medal for the 68 kg division at the 2008 European Taekwondo Championships in Rome, Italy. Manz is also the husband of two-time Olympic taekwondo jin Sümeyye Gülec. Manz qualified for the men's 68 kg class at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after placing second from the European Qualification Tournament in Istanbul, Turkey. He defeated Kyrgyzstan's Rasul Abduraim in the preliminary round of sixteen, before losing out the quarterfinal match to U.S. taekwondo jin Mark López, with a score of 1–3. Because his opponent advanced further into the final match, Manz took advantage of the repechage round by defeating Afghanistan's Nesar Ahmad Bahave. He progressed to the bronze medal match, but narrowly lost the medal to Chinese Taipei's Sung Yu-Chi, with a sudden death score of 3–4.",
"Lucas Daniel\n Lucas Daniel (born January 1, 1995) is a French competitive archer. He attained a fourth-place finish in the men's team recurve at the 2015 European Games, and eventually competed as a member of the French archery squad at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Daniel was selected to compete for the French squad at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, shooting in both individual and team recurve tournaments. First, Daniel amassed 666 points out of a maximum 720 to obtain a twenty-first seed heading to the knockout stage, along with his team's score of 2,003 collected from the classification round. Sitting at fifth in the men's team recurve, Daniel and his compatriots Pierre Plihon and Jean-Charles Valladont confidently beat the Malaysians in the opening round with a 2–6, before they faced a quarterfinal match against Australia, which led to the trio's untimely demise from the competition through a tough 3–5 defeat. In the men's individual recurve, Daniel succumbed to the reigning European Games champion Miguel Alvariño of Spain, who scored straight-set victories in the opening round.",
"Daniel Farabello\n A member of the senior men's Argentine national basketball team, he competed with the squad at the 1996 Summer Olympics and 2006 FIBA World Championship.",
"Daniel Manzato\n During the 2014–15 season, on January 5, 2015, Manzato signed a three-year contract extension to the remain in Lugano until 2018. Manzato joined HC Ambrì-Piotta for the 2018/19 season on a two-year deal. On December 12, 2019, in his final year of his contract with Ambri, Manzato agreed to a one-year deal with Genève-Servette HC for the 2020/21 season. On March 11, 2021, Manzato agreed to a one-year deal with SC Bern for the 2021/22 season.",
"Daniel Fuzato\n Daniel Cerantola Fuzato (born 4 July 1997) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Serie A club Roma.",
"Daniel Vargas (volleyball)\n During the summer of 2016, Vargas along with Mexico men's national volleyball team, ended their 48-year absence in the Olympic Games, when they secured the final place at stake for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games through the World Olympic Qualification Tournament, which took place in their home turf in Mexico City.",
"Daniel Fuzato\n Fuzato was born in Brazil and is of Italian descent, and has both passports. Fuzato is a youth international for Brazil, having represented the Brazil U20s once in 2016. He has been called up to represent Brazil U23s and the senior Brazil squad in 2019."
] |
What sport does 1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League play? | [
"basketball",
"hoops",
"b-ball",
"basket ball",
"BB",
"Basketball"
] | sport | 1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League | 1,368,451 | 62 | [
{
"id": "26472866",
"title": "1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points 1ZM Lumar merged with Branik after the season.",
"score": "1.8299398"
},
{
"id": "26472865",
"title": "1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the eighth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.810776"
},
{
"id": "26313298",
"title": "1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.8001232"
},
{
"id": "26313297",
"title": "1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League was the seventh season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.7876472"
},
{
"id": "26472928",
"title": "1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.743372"
},
{
"id": "29371105",
"title": "1997–98 Slovenian Hockey League season",
"text": "Olimpija (1) - Jesenice (2): 4–0 (4–3, 4–3, 7–2, 2–1) ",
"score": "1.7374558"
},
{
"id": "26472927",
"title": "1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the ninth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.7326887"
},
{
"id": "29371108",
"title": "1998–99 Slovenian Hockey League season",
"text": "18 March 1999: Olimpija – Slavija : 5–1 ; 20 March 1999: Slavija – Olimpija : 2–7 (0–3, 0–3, 2–1) ; 22 March 1999: Olimpija – Slavija : 7–2 (2–1, 5–0, 0–1) ",
"score": "1.731513"
},
{
"id": "26233925",
"title": "1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.729789"
},
{
"id": "26233924",
"title": "1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.729789"
},
{
"id": "26233923",
"title": "1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.729789"
},
{
"id": "26233922",
"title": "1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League was the sixth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.7184601"
},
{
"id": "29371107",
"title": "1998–99 Slovenian Hockey League season",
"text": " The 1998–99 Slovenian Ice Hockey League season was the eighth season of the Slovenian Hockey League. Olimpija defeated Slavija in the league final.",
"score": "1.7175624"
},
{
"id": "29371106",
"title": "1997–98 Slovenian Hockey League season",
"text": "Bled (3) - Slavija (4): 3–0 (4–1, 8–2, 5–4) ",
"score": "1.7064762"
},
{
"id": "29371102",
"title": "1996–97 Slovenian Hockey League season",
"text": "Olimpija (1) - Jesenice (2): 4–0 (2–1 n.V., 4–2, 8–2, 5–1) ",
"score": "1.6919653"
},
{
"id": "26956693",
"title": "2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.6844283"
},
{
"id": "26232693",
"title": "1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.6811256"
},
{
"id": "26232692",
"title": "1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"score": "1.6811256"
},
{
"id": "26232691",
"title": "1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League was the fifth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.6756161"
},
{
"id": "26956692",
"title": "2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League",
"text": " The 2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the tenth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"score": "1.666779"
}
] | [
"1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points 1ZM Lumar merged with Branik after the season.",
"1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 1998–99 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the eighth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 1997–98 Slovenian Basketball League was the seventh season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1997–98 Slovenian Hockey League season\nOlimpija (1) - Jesenice (2): 4–0 (4–3, 4–3, 7–2, 2–1) ",
"1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 1999–2000 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the ninth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"1998–99 Slovenian Hockey League season\n18 March 1999: Olimpija – Slavija : 5–1 ; 20 March 1999: Slavija – Olimpija : 2–7 (0–3, 0–3, 2–1) ; 22 March 1999: Olimpija – Slavija : 7–2 (2–1, 5–0, 0–1) ",
"1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 1996–97 Slovenian Basketball League was the sixth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"1998–99 Slovenian Hockey League season\n The 1998–99 Slovenian Ice Hockey League season was the eighth season of the Slovenian Hockey League. Olimpija defeated Slavija in the league final.",
"1997–98 Slovenian Hockey League season\nBled (3) - Slavija (4): 3–0 (4–1, 8–2, 5–4) ",
"1996–97 Slovenian Hockey League season\nOlimpija (1) - Jesenice (2): 4–0 (2–1 n.V., 4–2, 8–2, 5–1) ",
"2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League\n P=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points",
"1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 1995–96 Slovenian Basketball League was the fifth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia.",
"2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League\n The 2000–01 Slovenian Basketball League, known as Liga Kolinska for sponsorship reasons, was the tenth season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia."
] |
What sport does John Parsons play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | John Parsons (footballer) | 4,729,881 | 69 | [
{
"id": "10660385",
"title": "John Anthony Parsons",
"text": " John was born the son of Les Parsons and his wife Marion in Oxford on 20 February 1938. His father had been president of the Lawn Tennis Association for the Oxford area. As a schoolboy at Magdalen College School, Parsons was a member of the tennis team. At the age of 14, he began writing football match reports for the Oxford Mail. After leaving school in 1956, he took a job as a reporter on general topics at the paper. In 1964 he moved to the Daily Mail. In January 1981, Parsons came to the Daily Telegraph and succeeded Lance Tingay as tennis correspondent. In 2001, he retired ",
"score": "1.763603"
},
{
"id": "10660384",
"title": "John Anthony Parsons",
"text": " John Anthony Parsons (20 February 1938 – 26 April 2004) was a British sports journalist and author.",
"score": "1.7521989"
},
{
"id": "8971219",
"title": "Bob Parsons (American football)",
"text": " Robert Heber \"Bob\" Parsons (born June 29, 1950 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania) is a former NFL punter and tight end from (1972-1983) for the Chicago Bears. He later played with the Birmingham Stallions of the United States Football League. During the off season, Parsons did some substitute teaching in Wheaton, Illinois. He has 3 kids; Michelle, Greg, and Mallory, the youngest who currently plays volleyball at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin.",
"score": "1.7033331"
},
{
"id": "10716458",
"title": "Frank Parsons (soccer)",
"text": " Parsons began his senior club career with Adamstown before moving to Sydney to play for Leichhardt-Annandale. He announced his retirement several times, citing scrutiny from referees and politics.",
"score": "1.6385334"
},
{
"id": "10792333",
"title": "Michael Parsons (Australian footballer)",
"text": " he played for the West Adelaide Bearcats in the NBL. Parsons later converted to Australian Rules Football, playing as a ruckman. He is best remembered in football circles for his Jack Oatey Medal winning performance in North Adelaide's 1987 SANFL Grand Final win. He was then recruited to Sydney with the tenth pick in the 1987 VFL Draft but struggled to make an impact in his three years, although he gathered three Brownlow Medal votes for his 23 disposal effort in a match against the West Coast Eagles midway through his first season. Parsons returned to North Adelaide in 1991 and finished the year as a member of another premiership team. In 2008, Parsons suffered a stroke and was revealed to be suffering from a brain tumour. He died in hospital on 24 April 2009.",
"score": "1.6372712"
},
{
"id": "30009596",
"title": "Don Parsons (ice hockey)",
"text": " Parsons currently lives outside of Lancaster, PA and is married to his wife Kristen, and have three children: Abby, Maggy, and Maddox. They met while Parsons was a member of the Johnstown Chiefs.",
"score": "1.6322196"
},
{
"id": "7319755",
"title": "Buzz Parsons",
"text": " Parsons played youth football in England with Huddersfield Town and Ipswich Town, but he never made a senior league appearance for either team. Parsons returned to Canada to play with the Vancouver Spartans and Vancouver Eintracht, winning the Challenge Cup with Eintracht in 1971. He also played with Vancouver Italia (Columbus FC) in 1972–1974. He spent one year (1975) studying and playing at Simon Fraser University, netting 21 goals. Parsons later played in the North American Soccer League for the Vancouver Whitecaps between 1976 and 1982, scoring 17 goals in 106 appearances. Parsons started at right back in the 1979 NASL championship game that the Whitecaps won 2–1. Parsons also played indoor soccer during this period for the Los Angeles Aztecs and the Whitecaps.",
"score": "1.62099"
},
{
"id": "31992103",
"title": "Tom Parsons (Gaelic footballer)",
"text": " 2008 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship semi-final in 2008. He was selected as part of the Ireland squad to play in the 2008 International Rules Series against Australia. some speculation that Parsons might consider signing a contract with an Australian Football League club, but he said that he had no interest in playing Australian rules. Parsons was recalled to the Mayo senior team in 2020, dislocated his knee and ruptured ligaments and torn calf and hamstring in the 2018 Connacht Senior Football Championship match against Galway. He announced his retirement from inter-county football in January 2021, shortly after his teammates David Clarke and Donal Vaughan.",
"score": "1.6168853"
},
{
"id": "1785185",
"title": "James Parsons (rugby union)",
"text": " He was first selected for North Harbour in 2007 and went on to become a centurion for the province. In 2012 he debuted for the Blues in Super Rugby, his first game being against the Highlanders. After being called up to the All Blacks squad as injury cover, he made his international debut against Scotland on 15 November 2014. Parsons is one of eight All Blacks to have come from the Takapuna Rugby Club. In 2015, he gave up his starting spot to the retiring Keven Mealamu in his 50th appearance for the Blues against Highlanders at Eden Park. Parsons would take over as the captain of the Blues the following year. Parsons was re-selected for New Zealand in 2016, following the injury of Nathan Harris, playing off the bench against Australia in Westpac Stadium for the Bledisloe Series. Parsons was later injured himself at a training session, preventing any further game time that year. In the same year he won Blues Player of the Year. In 2019 Parsons re-signed with the Blues until 2021. In January 2021, Parsons announced his retirement from rugby, on medical advice.",
"score": "1.6168563"
},
{
"id": "8679518",
"title": "Andrew Parsons (sports administrator)",
"text": " Parsons was born in Brazil to Scottish parents. He served as chairperson of the Brazilian Paralympic Committee from 2009 to 2017, chairperson of the United States Paralympic Committee from 2005 to 2009, and as a member of the Nominating Committee for the 2020 Summer Olympic Games. He is the current president of the International Paralympic Committee since 8 September 2017. Parsons took over from Sir Philip Craven, who had been in office since 2001, after being elected in the first round in the election held during the 18th assembly of IPC in Abu Dhabi. Parsons himself does not have a disability, a fact that, he says, takes some observers by surprise.",
"score": "1.6028476"
},
{
"id": "10792332",
"title": "Michael Parsons (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Michael Wayne Parsons (3 October 1960 – 24 April 2009) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Sydney Swans in the Victorian/Australian Football League (VFL/AFL) and North Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL). Parsons grew up in Legana, Tasmania. He first played football as a junior with Launceston. He played under ex-St.Kilda defender Roy Apted who coached the young Blues to the 1976 Under 16 premiership in the Northern Tasmanian Junior Football Association (NTJFA). Nicknamed \"Bristles\", Parsons was initially a talented basketball player also, winning a basketball scholarship to Utah. Upon returning to Australia he played for the Launceston Casino City in the National Basketball League. Most notably, he played at Launceston in the 1981 NBL Season, where they were league Champions. Parsons later moved to Adelaide to continue his studies, ",
"score": "1.6004846"
},
{
"id": "15385601",
"title": "Earle Parsons",
"text": " Earle Odber Parsons, Jr. (September 16, 1921 – December 18, 2014) was an American football halfback who played two seasons with the San Francisco 49ers. He played college football at the University of Southern California, having previously attended high school in his hometown of Helena, Montana. He is a member of the Helena Sports Hall of Fame. Parsons died on December 18, 2014, at the age of 93.",
"score": "1.5984802"
},
{
"id": "8630796",
"title": "Casey Parsons",
"text": " Casey Robert Parsons is a former Major League Baseball outfielder. He played parts of four seasons in the majors, between and, for the Seattle Mariners, Chicago White Sox, and Cleveland Indians. In four seasons, he played in just 63 games, and in less than half of those (31) did he appear in the field. Parsons was used as a pinch hitter or pinch runner 48 times in those 63 games. Parsons was born in Wenatchee, Washington, and he attended Gonzaga University, where he played college baseball for the Bulldogs from 1973 to 1976. Following his Major League career, Parsons spent seven years as a manager in the Oakland Athletics organization. From until, Parsons managed five different teams in the minors. His teams made the playoffs twice, losing in the first round each time.",
"score": "1.595975"
},
{
"id": "10660386",
"title": "John Anthony Parsons",
"text": " full-time work but continued to cover major events for the paper. Beside his journalistic work, he published numerous books including The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Tennis (1998) and the Official Wimbledon Annual every year. Parsons was born with only one functioning kidney. He received a kidney transplant in 1982 after his only kidney had been injured by a soldier during a military coup in Nigeria in 1975. While reporting from the NASDAQ-100 Open at Miami in March 2004, he suffered an acute kidney failure and was brought to Mercy Hospital. He died there a month later. He was unmarried and survived by his parents and his sister Heather Nason.",
"score": "1.5938885"
},
{
"id": "10716457",
"title": "Frank Parsons (soccer)",
"text": " He attended Adamstown Public School.",
"score": "1.5935856"
},
{
"id": "30009594",
"title": "Don Parsons (ice hockey)",
"text": " Parsons's #13 was retired by the Memphis Riverkings in a pregame ceremony on March 14, 2010. He is the second such honoree in the team's history, joining the late Scott Brower.",
"score": "1.5919988"
},
{
"id": "7319754",
"title": "Buzz Parsons",
"text": " Les \"Buzz\" Parsons (born 16 December 1950) is a Canadian former soccer player who played at both professional and international levels as a midfielder. During his career in North America with the Vancouver Whitecaps, Parsons was affectionately known as \"White Shoes\", owing to the white boots he wore. After retiring as a player, Parsons later became a professional soccer coach.",
"score": "1.589967"
},
{
"id": "15840005",
"title": "Wes Parsons",
"text": " Arthur Wesley Parsons (born September 6, 1992) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the NC Dinos of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Atlanta Braves and the Colorado Rockies.",
"score": "1.5882933"
},
{
"id": "30834566",
"title": "Joel Parsons",
"text": " Parsons was a member of the treble winning Hull Vikings team that won the Premier League, the KO Cup and the Young Shield in 2004.",
"score": "1.5867652"
},
{
"id": "10716456",
"title": "Frank Parsons (soccer)",
"text": " For the Crystal Palace and Cardiff City player, see Frank Parsons (English footballer) Frank Parsons was an Australian retired soccer player who played as a striker for the Australia national soccer team. He played his club football for Adamstown and Leichhardt-Annandale.",
"score": "1.5862887"
}
] | [
"John Anthony Parsons\n John was born the son of Les Parsons and his wife Marion in Oxford on 20 February 1938. His father had been president of the Lawn Tennis Association for the Oxford area. As a schoolboy at Magdalen College School, Parsons was a member of the tennis team. At the age of 14, he began writing football match reports for the Oxford Mail. After leaving school in 1956, he took a job as a reporter on general topics at the paper. In 1964 he moved to the Daily Mail. In January 1981, Parsons came to the Daily Telegraph and succeeded Lance Tingay as tennis correspondent. In 2001, he retired ",
"John Anthony Parsons\n John Anthony Parsons (20 February 1938 – 26 April 2004) was a British sports journalist and author.",
"Bob Parsons (American football)\n Robert Heber \"Bob\" Parsons (born June 29, 1950 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania) is a former NFL punter and tight end from (1972-1983) for the Chicago Bears. He later played with the Birmingham Stallions of the United States Football League. During the off season, Parsons did some substitute teaching in Wheaton, Illinois. He has 3 kids; Michelle, Greg, and Mallory, the youngest who currently plays volleyball at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin.",
"Frank Parsons (soccer)\n Parsons began his senior club career with Adamstown before moving to Sydney to play for Leichhardt-Annandale. He announced his retirement several times, citing scrutiny from referees and politics.",
"Michael Parsons (Australian footballer)\n he played for the West Adelaide Bearcats in the NBL. Parsons later converted to Australian Rules Football, playing as a ruckman. He is best remembered in football circles for his Jack Oatey Medal winning performance in North Adelaide's 1987 SANFL Grand Final win. He was then recruited to Sydney with the tenth pick in the 1987 VFL Draft but struggled to make an impact in his three years, although he gathered three Brownlow Medal votes for his 23 disposal effort in a match against the West Coast Eagles midway through his first season. Parsons returned to North Adelaide in 1991 and finished the year as a member of another premiership team. In 2008, Parsons suffered a stroke and was revealed to be suffering from a brain tumour. He died in hospital on 24 April 2009.",
"Don Parsons (ice hockey)\n Parsons currently lives outside of Lancaster, PA and is married to his wife Kristen, and have three children: Abby, Maggy, and Maddox. They met while Parsons was a member of the Johnstown Chiefs.",
"Buzz Parsons\n Parsons played youth football in England with Huddersfield Town and Ipswich Town, but he never made a senior league appearance for either team. Parsons returned to Canada to play with the Vancouver Spartans and Vancouver Eintracht, winning the Challenge Cup with Eintracht in 1971. He also played with Vancouver Italia (Columbus FC) in 1972–1974. He spent one year (1975) studying and playing at Simon Fraser University, netting 21 goals. Parsons later played in the North American Soccer League for the Vancouver Whitecaps between 1976 and 1982, scoring 17 goals in 106 appearances. Parsons started at right back in the 1979 NASL championship game that the Whitecaps won 2–1. Parsons also played indoor soccer during this period for the Los Angeles Aztecs and the Whitecaps.",
"Tom Parsons (Gaelic footballer)\n 2008 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship semi-final in 2008. He was selected as part of the Ireland squad to play in the 2008 International Rules Series against Australia. some speculation that Parsons might consider signing a contract with an Australian Football League club, but he said that he had no interest in playing Australian rules. Parsons was recalled to the Mayo senior team in 2020, dislocated his knee and ruptured ligaments and torn calf and hamstring in the 2018 Connacht Senior Football Championship match against Galway. He announced his retirement from inter-county football in January 2021, shortly after his teammates David Clarke and Donal Vaughan.",
"James Parsons (rugby union)\n He was first selected for North Harbour in 2007 and went on to become a centurion for the province. In 2012 he debuted for the Blues in Super Rugby, his first game being against the Highlanders. After being called up to the All Blacks squad as injury cover, he made his international debut against Scotland on 15 November 2014. Parsons is one of eight All Blacks to have come from the Takapuna Rugby Club. In 2015, he gave up his starting spot to the retiring Keven Mealamu in his 50th appearance for the Blues against Highlanders at Eden Park. Parsons would take over as the captain of the Blues the following year. Parsons was re-selected for New Zealand in 2016, following the injury of Nathan Harris, playing off the bench against Australia in Westpac Stadium for the Bledisloe Series. Parsons was later injured himself at a training session, preventing any further game time that year. In the same year he won Blues Player of the Year. In 2019 Parsons re-signed with the Blues until 2021. In January 2021, Parsons announced his retirement from rugby, on medical advice.",
"Andrew Parsons (sports administrator)\n Parsons was born in Brazil to Scottish parents. He served as chairperson of the Brazilian Paralympic Committee from 2009 to 2017, chairperson of the United States Paralympic Committee from 2005 to 2009, and as a member of the Nominating Committee for the 2020 Summer Olympic Games. He is the current president of the International Paralympic Committee since 8 September 2017. Parsons took over from Sir Philip Craven, who had been in office since 2001, after being elected in the first round in the election held during the 18th assembly of IPC in Abu Dhabi. Parsons himself does not have a disability, a fact that, he says, takes some observers by surprise.",
"Michael Parsons (Australian footballer)\n Michael Wayne Parsons (3 October 1960 – 24 April 2009) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Sydney Swans in the Victorian/Australian Football League (VFL/AFL) and North Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL). Parsons grew up in Legana, Tasmania. He first played football as a junior with Launceston. He played under ex-St.Kilda defender Roy Apted who coached the young Blues to the 1976 Under 16 premiership in the Northern Tasmanian Junior Football Association (NTJFA). Nicknamed \"Bristles\", Parsons was initially a talented basketball player also, winning a basketball scholarship to Utah. Upon returning to Australia he played for the Launceston Casino City in the National Basketball League. Most notably, he played at Launceston in the 1981 NBL Season, where they were league Champions. Parsons later moved to Adelaide to continue his studies, ",
"Earle Parsons\n Earle Odber Parsons, Jr. (September 16, 1921 – December 18, 2014) was an American football halfback who played two seasons with the San Francisco 49ers. He played college football at the University of Southern California, having previously attended high school in his hometown of Helena, Montana. He is a member of the Helena Sports Hall of Fame. Parsons died on December 18, 2014, at the age of 93.",
"Casey Parsons\n Casey Robert Parsons is a former Major League Baseball outfielder. He played parts of four seasons in the majors, between and, for the Seattle Mariners, Chicago White Sox, and Cleveland Indians. In four seasons, he played in just 63 games, and in less than half of those (31) did he appear in the field. Parsons was used as a pinch hitter or pinch runner 48 times in those 63 games. Parsons was born in Wenatchee, Washington, and he attended Gonzaga University, where he played college baseball for the Bulldogs from 1973 to 1976. Following his Major League career, Parsons spent seven years as a manager in the Oakland Athletics organization. From until, Parsons managed five different teams in the minors. His teams made the playoffs twice, losing in the first round each time.",
"John Anthony Parsons\n full-time work but continued to cover major events for the paper. Beside his journalistic work, he published numerous books including The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Tennis (1998) and the Official Wimbledon Annual every year. Parsons was born with only one functioning kidney. He received a kidney transplant in 1982 after his only kidney had been injured by a soldier during a military coup in Nigeria in 1975. While reporting from the NASDAQ-100 Open at Miami in March 2004, he suffered an acute kidney failure and was brought to Mercy Hospital. He died there a month later. He was unmarried and survived by his parents and his sister Heather Nason.",
"Frank Parsons (soccer)\n He attended Adamstown Public School.",
"Don Parsons (ice hockey)\n Parsons's #13 was retired by the Memphis Riverkings in a pregame ceremony on March 14, 2010. He is the second such honoree in the team's history, joining the late Scott Brower.",
"Buzz Parsons\n Les \"Buzz\" Parsons (born 16 December 1950) is a Canadian former soccer player who played at both professional and international levels as a midfielder. During his career in North America with the Vancouver Whitecaps, Parsons was affectionately known as \"White Shoes\", owing to the white boots he wore. After retiring as a player, Parsons later became a professional soccer coach.",
"Wes Parsons\n Arthur Wesley Parsons (born September 6, 1992) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the NC Dinos of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Atlanta Braves and the Colorado Rockies.",
"Joel Parsons\n Parsons was a member of the treble winning Hull Vikings team that won the Premier League, the KO Cup and the Young Shield in 2004.",
"Frank Parsons (soccer)\n For the Crystal Palace and Cardiff City player, see Frank Parsons (English footballer) Frank Parsons was an Australian retired soccer player who played as a striker for the Australia national soccer team. He played his club football for Adamstown and Leichhardt-Annandale."
] |
What sport does list of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012 play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012 | 4,975,222 | 49 | [
{
"id": "32628484",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628483",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628482",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628481",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628480",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628479",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628478",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628477",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628476",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628475",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628474",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628473",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.7966075"
},
{
"id": "32628472",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012",
"text": " This is a list of Azerbaijan football transfers in the winter transfer window 2012 by club. Only clubs of the 2011–12 Azerbaijan Premier League are included.",
"score": "1.7595663"
},
{
"id": "32444063",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2010",
"text": " In: Out: .",
"score": "1.699224"
},
{
"id": "32444055",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2010",
"text": " In: . Out:",
"score": "1.6929023"
},
{
"id": "26933668",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.6829948"
},
{
"id": "26933667",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.6829948"
},
{
"id": "26933666",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.6829948"
},
{
"id": "26933665",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.6829948"
},
{
"id": "26933664",
"title": "List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016",
"text": " In: Out:",
"score": "1.6829948"
}
] | [
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2012\n This is a list of Azerbaijan football transfers in the winter transfer window 2012 by club. Only clubs of the 2011–12 Azerbaijan Premier League are included.",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2010\n In: Out: .",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2010\n In: . Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016\n In: Out:",
"List of Azerbaijan football transfers winter 2016\n In: Out:"
] |
What sport does Abdulhadi Khalaf play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer) | 3,209,325 | 46 | [
{
"id": "1691335",
"title": "Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)",
"text": " Khalaf plays between 2003 and 2005 for the Under-19 Syrian national team. The Syrian U-19 team that finished in Fourth place in the AFC U-19 Championship 2004 in Malaysia and he was a part of the Syrian U-20 team in the FIFA U-20 World Cup 2005. in the Netherlands. He plays against Canada, Italy and Colombia in the group-stage of the FIFA U-20 World Cup 2005.",
"score": "1.9213227"
},
{
"id": "1691334",
"title": "Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)",
"text": " Abdul-Hadi Khalaf (عبد الهادي خلف) (born January 1, 1986 in Homs) is a Syrian football player who is currently playing for Al-Karamah in the Syrian Premier League.",
"score": "1.8718648"
},
{
"id": "1691337",
"title": "Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)",
"text": "AFC U-19 Championship 2004 Fourth place ",
"score": "1.8227272"
},
{
"id": "4071577",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " Khaled played half the season until the Waff Cup with the international team he got injured in his knee where he couldn't play the whole season",
"score": "1.7454902"
},
{
"id": "4071570",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " Khaled Ahmad Khalaf Matar (خالد أحمد خلف; born August 15, 1983 in Kuwait City) is a Kuwaiti footballer who plays in Attack for Kuwaiti Premier League club Al Arabi and the Kuwait national football team with his brothers in Al-Arabi Khalaf Ahmed Khalaf and Ali Khalaf. He played for Al-Arabi in the 2007 AFC Champions League group stage. He is away from football for 2 and a half seasons due to injury in his leg and has returned to football in Al-Arabi Sporting Club in season 2014-15.",
"score": "1.6834939"
},
{
"id": "8600294",
"title": "Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf",
"text": " Ahmed Ibrahim was part of the squad that went to Brazil in the summer of 2016 for the Rio Olympics and was one of Iraq's standout players as his defending helped hold a Brazil team featuring Neymar, Gabriel Jesus, Marquinhos and Gabriel Barbosa to a 0-0 draw. Iraq only conceded one goal in the Olympics and despite being knocked out after the group stages, went out undefeated.",
"score": "1.6702353"
},
{
"id": "1691336",
"title": "Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)",
"text": "Al-Karamah ; Syrian Premier League: ; Winner (4): 2005-06, 2006–07, 2007-08, 2008-09 ; Syrian Cup: ; Winner (3): 2006-07, 2007–08, 2008-09 ; Syrian Super Cup: ; Winner (1): 2007-08 ; Asian Champions League: ; 2005-06 Runner-up ",
"score": "1.669637"
},
{
"id": "4071578",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " After his recovery he came back and won The Kuwait Crown Prince Cup but after that his Knee got injured again and was spelled out for 2 and a half seasons from the club but all championship the club won was added to his career since he was part of the team.",
"score": "1.6688235"
},
{
"id": "4071571",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " Khalid started his youth career in Al-Arabi SC which he scored many goals for the team and moved on to the 1st team with Ali Maqseed and many other player from the youth team.",
"score": "1.6686349"
},
{
"id": "4071572",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " After he joined the first team he was a fantastic sub for the coach where he used to substitute him when the team is down or tied he would score with Firas Al-Khatib.",
"score": "1.6575651"
},
{
"id": "31966633",
"title": "Younis Mahmoud",
"text": " Younis Mahmoud Khalaf (يونس محمود خلف; born 3 February 1983) is an Iraqi former professional footballer who played as a forward for the Iraq national football team and is currently the second vice-president of the Iraq Football Association. One of the country's greatest ever players, Mahmoud captained the team for ten straight years and became an icon of Asian football. He also played for a number of clubs including teams in Iraq, UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, winning three Golden Boots in Qatar and breaking numerous records. Mahmoud's first official international goal was an equaliser in the 89th minute of the final of the 2002 WAFF Championship, which Iraq then went on to win in extra-time. Three years later, Mahmoud scored in the final of the 2005 West Asian Games to lead his team to another tournament win, before becoming the national team ",
"score": "1.6523719"
},
{
"id": "4071579",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " THE GREAT RETURN as of the 2014-15 season Khaled returned and was fully healthy to play again but he played 1 game with the reserves and it was against Burgan SC he played 45 minutes only with one assist and never played a game after those 45 minutes. and Took another injury after that match in his foot which ruled him out for 1 and a half months and returned to play the last 8 mins against Al-Naser SC in the 2-1 win in the Reserves league. And was crowned champions of the Kuwait Crown Prince Cup for the third time in his career and the 7th for his team. his Cup return was vs Kazma SC in Kuwait Federation Cup group-stage mach 1-1.",
"score": "1.6491659"
},
{
"id": "7958781",
"title": "Mohammed Khalaf",
"text": " Mohammed Khalaf (Arabic:محمد خلف) (born 21 December 2000) is an Emirati footballer. He currently plays as a goalkeeper for Baniyas.",
"score": "1.6339402"
},
{
"id": "8600290",
"title": "Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf",
"text": " Following the Olympic games in Rio, Ahmed announced his return to the Iraqi Premier League by signing for Al Shorta but a clause in his contract stated that if an offer came in from a foreign club, he would be allowed to leave. Ahmed never ended up playing for Al Shorta as the clause was triggered.",
"score": "1.6146443"
},
{
"id": "1773055",
"title": "Amer Ali",
"text": " Amer Ali Ahmed Khalaf (عامر علي أحمد خلف) is a Jordanian footballer who plays as a defender for Al-Ramtha and Jordan U-22.",
"score": "1.5872008"
},
{
"id": "15823698",
"title": "Abdulhadi Khalaf",
"text": " Abdulhadi Khalaf (عبد الهادي خلف, born 1945) is a Bahraini leftist political activist and senior lecturer in the Sociology department at Lund University. He is regarded as a specialist in the politics of the Persian Gulf region.",
"score": "1.5830767"
},
{
"id": "8600297",
"title": "Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf",
"text": "Iraq U-23 ; AFC U-22 Championship: 2013 ; Iraq ; Arab Nations Cup Bronze medallist: 2012 ; WAFF Championship runner-up: 2012 ; Arabian Gulf Cup runner-up: 2013 ; AFC Asian Cup fourth-place: 2015 ",
"score": "1.5830764"
},
{
"id": "985347",
"title": "Munthir Khalaf",
"text": " Munthir Khalaf (1 July 1970 – 14 March 2008) was an Iraqi football midfielder who played for Iraq at the 1994 World Cup qualification. He played for the national team between 1992 and 1993. Khalaf was assassinated in front of his home at the Yarmouk area in Baghdad on 14 March 2008.",
"score": "1.5822966"
},
{
"id": "12724344",
"title": "Wadud Khalil",
"text": " Khalil was born in Baghdad and excelled at various sports from football, basketball, hockey and water polo. He was even trained by Englishman George Raynor who selected the 17-year-old to play at right halfback against Lebanon in 1945 in Baghdad. Wadud went onto pursue a career in the army and graduated as a second lieutenant in 1950 from the prestigious Kuliya Al-Askariya (Military College). As a student he represented the College in table tennis, water polo, badminton and the track and field athletics and captained their football and basketball teams. In 1953 he left the army, reports stated he had been discharged because of a back injury, however ",
"score": "1.5778041"
},
{
"id": "4071573",
"title": "Khaled Khalaf",
"text": " But Khaled truly made his dominance in Kuwaiti Football in the 2006-2007 season when he scored 2 goals against Qadsia SC. through that season, by scoring in the Final against Kazma Sporting Clubin the Kuwait Crown Prince Cup and Crowning them champions for the 5th time and his first.",
"score": "1.5755625"
}
] | [
"Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)\n Khalaf plays between 2003 and 2005 for the Under-19 Syrian national team. The Syrian U-19 team that finished in Fourth place in the AFC U-19 Championship 2004 in Malaysia and he was a part of the Syrian U-20 team in the FIFA U-20 World Cup 2005. in the Netherlands. He plays against Canada, Italy and Colombia in the group-stage of the FIFA U-20 World Cup 2005.",
"Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)\n Abdul-Hadi Khalaf (عبد الهادي خلف) (born January 1, 1986 in Homs) is a Syrian football player who is currently playing for Al-Karamah in the Syrian Premier League.",
"Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)\nAFC U-19 Championship 2004 Fourth place ",
"Khaled Khalaf\n Khaled played half the season until the Waff Cup with the international team he got injured in his knee where he couldn't play the whole season",
"Khaled Khalaf\n Khaled Ahmad Khalaf Matar (خالد أحمد خلف; born August 15, 1983 in Kuwait City) is a Kuwaiti footballer who plays in Attack for Kuwaiti Premier League club Al Arabi and the Kuwait national football team with his brothers in Al-Arabi Khalaf Ahmed Khalaf and Ali Khalaf. He played for Al-Arabi in the 2007 AFC Champions League group stage. He is away from football for 2 and a half seasons due to injury in his leg and has returned to football in Al-Arabi Sporting Club in season 2014-15.",
"Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf\n Ahmed Ibrahim was part of the squad that went to Brazil in the summer of 2016 for the Rio Olympics and was one of Iraq's standout players as his defending helped hold a Brazil team featuring Neymar, Gabriel Jesus, Marquinhos and Gabriel Barbosa to a 0-0 draw. Iraq only conceded one goal in the Olympics and despite being knocked out after the group stages, went out undefeated.",
"Abdulhadi Khalaf (footballer)\nAl-Karamah ; Syrian Premier League: ; Winner (4): 2005-06, 2006–07, 2007-08, 2008-09 ; Syrian Cup: ; Winner (3): 2006-07, 2007–08, 2008-09 ; Syrian Super Cup: ; Winner (1): 2007-08 ; Asian Champions League: ; 2005-06 Runner-up ",
"Khaled Khalaf\n After his recovery he came back and won The Kuwait Crown Prince Cup but after that his Knee got injured again and was spelled out for 2 and a half seasons from the club but all championship the club won was added to his career since he was part of the team.",
"Khaled Khalaf\n Khalid started his youth career in Al-Arabi SC which he scored many goals for the team and moved on to the 1st team with Ali Maqseed and many other player from the youth team.",
"Khaled Khalaf\n After he joined the first team he was a fantastic sub for the coach where he used to substitute him when the team is down or tied he would score with Firas Al-Khatib.",
"Younis Mahmoud\n Younis Mahmoud Khalaf (يونس محمود خلف; born 3 February 1983) is an Iraqi former professional footballer who played as a forward for the Iraq national football team and is currently the second vice-president of the Iraq Football Association. One of the country's greatest ever players, Mahmoud captained the team for ten straight years and became an icon of Asian football. He also played for a number of clubs including teams in Iraq, UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, winning three Golden Boots in Qatar and breaking numerous records. Mahmoud's first official international goal was an equaliser in the 89th minute of the final of the 2002 WAFF Championship, which Iraq then went on to win in extra-time. Three years later, Mahmoud scored in the final of the 2005 West Asian Games to lead his team to another tournament win, before becoming the national team ",
"Khaled Khalaf\n THE GREAT RETURN as of the 2014-15 season Khaled returned and was fully healthy to play again but he played 1 game with the reserves and it was against Burgan SC he played 45 minutes only with one assist and never played a game after those 45 minutes. and Took another injury after that match in his foot which ruled him out for 1 and a half months and returned to play the last 8 mins against Al-Naser SC in the 2-1 win in the Reserves league. And was crowned champions of the Kuwait Crown Prince Cup for the third time in his career and the 7th for his team. his Cup return was vs Kazma SC in Kuwait Federation Cup group-stage mach 1-1.",
"Mohammed Khalaf\n Mohammed Khalaf (Arabic:محمد خلف) (born 21 December 2000) is an Emirati footballer. He currently plays as a goalkeeper for Baniyas.",
"Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf\n Following the Olympic games in Rio, Ahmed announced his return to the Iraqi Premier League by signing for Al Shorta but a clause in his contract stated that if an offer came in from a foreign club, he would be allowed to leave. Ahmed never ended up playing for Al Shorta as the clause was triggered.",
"Amer Ali\n Amer Ali Ahmed Khalaf (عامر علي أحمد خلف) is a Jordanian footballer who plays as a defender for Al-Ramtha and Jordan U-22.",
"Abdulhadi Khalaf\n Abdulhadi Khalaf (عبد الهادي خلف, born 1945) is a Bahraini leftist political activist and senior lecturer in the Sociology department at Lund University. He is regarded as a specialist in the politics of the Persian Gulf region.",
"Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf\nIraq U-23 ; AFC U-22 Championship: 2013 ; Iraq ; Arab Nations Cup Bronze medallist: 2012 ; WAFF Championship runner-up: 2012 ; Arabian Gulf Cup runner-up: 2013 ; AFC Asian Cup fourth-place: 2015 ",
"Munthir Khalaf\n Munthir Khalaf (1 July 1970 – 14 March 2008) was an Iraqi football midfielder who played for Iraq at the 1994 World Cup qualification. He played for the national team between 1992 and 1993. Khalaf was assassinated in front of his home at the Yarmouk area in Baghdad on 14 March 2008.",
"Wadud Khalil\n Khalil was born in Baghdad and excelled at various sports from football, basketball, hockey and water polo. He was even trained by Englishman George Raynor who selected the 17-year-old to play at right halfback against Lebanon in 1945 in Baghdad. Wadud went onto pursue a career in the army and graduated as a second lieutenant in 1950 from the prestigious Kuliya Al-Askariya (Military College). As a student he represented the College in table tennis, water polo, badminton and the track and field athletics and captained their football and basketball teams. In 1953 he left the army, reports stated he had been discharged because of a back injury, however ",
"Khaled Khalaf\n But Khaled truly made his dominance in Kuwaiti Football in the 2006-2007 season when he scored 2 goals against Qadsia SC. through that season, by scoring in the Final against Kazma Sporting Clubin the Kuwait Crown Prince Cup and Crowning them champions for the 5th time and his first."
] |
What sport does VOKO-Irodion play? | [
"volleyball"
] | sport | VOKO-Irodion | 6,087,186 | 49 | [
{
"id": "5010310",
"title": "VOKO-Irodion",
"text": " VOKO-Irodion is a volleyball club from Oosterhout. VOKO was founded in 1974 as an agreement between former Oosterhout volleyball clubs LEC and RELAX. The first team plays in the Dutch third division, and their goal is promote to the national divisions.",
"score": "1.7997112"
},
{
"id": "3090972",
"title": "Nikko Landeros",
"text": " Nikko Landeros (born April 28, 1989) is an ice sled hockey player and paralympic freestyle skier from the United States. He took part in the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver, where USA won gold. They beat Japan 2-0 in the final. He was also on the team USA in the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, which won gold by beating Russia 1-0 in the final. He and his best friend Tyler Carron had an accident when they were 17. Both lost their legs. His father is a native of Mexico and his mother is from Milan, Italy.",
"score": "1.397317"
},
{
"id": "7967888",
"title": "Spirydion Albański",
"text": " Spirydion Jan Albański (4 October 1907 – 30 March 1992), nicknamed \"Spirytus\" and \"Romek\", was a Polish football goalkeeper in the 1930s. He played for Pogoń Lwów and the Polish National Team. Albański was born in Lwów (Lviv). He graduated from high school after the Second World War, when he was forced to move from Lwów to Upper Silesia, worked in the coal-mining industry. He was later a civil servant, and also a soccer coach.",
"score": "1.3244538"
},
{
"id": "10252696",
"title": "Serhiy Vovkodav",
"text": " Serhiy Vovkodav (Сергій Васильович Вовкодав; born 2 July 1988) is a Ukrainian professional football defender who plays for FC Poltava in the Ukrainian First League. Playing in the youth competitions of the Ukrainian Premier League in 2006–2013, on 27 May 2021 retained its record with the most games in competitions among under-21 teams.",
"score": "1.3173528"
},
{
"id": "30032799",
"title": "A1 Belarus",
"text": " Amediateka, START, ivi, The Walt Disney Studios movies and cartoons. The service is accessible from Android and iOS mobile devices, Smart TV running on Tizen, WebOS, Android TV, on RedboxMini, Xiaomi Mi Box 3, Apple TV (via AirPlay) boxes. Desktop users can access the video service via the VOKA application for Windows or on the website. In 2018, VOKA launched proprietary media content: \"Our Football\" and \"Our Hockey\" offering broadcasts of games with Belarusian clubs and national teams, live streaming of concerts, music festivals, conferences and forums, as well as cyber sports tournaments in the section \"Cybersport\". Also available for ",
"score": "1.3166358"
},
{
"id": "243363",
"title": "Evgeny Voronov",
"text": " Voronov is also a member of the senior Russian national basketball team. He competed with the team for the first time at the 2010 FIBA World Championship after previously making appearances with the junior national team, including helping the team to a gold medal at the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He was part of the Russian team that won the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.3049479"
},
{
"id": "32863715",
"title": "Sergei Voronov (ice hockey)",
"text": " the 1992-93 season. Voronov remained with the Thunder for the remainder of the season, scoring six points in 40 games but did not play any games in the postseason. After two seasons in the North American minor leagues, Voronov returned to Russia. Voronov spent the next 10 out of his 11 seasons in Russia, including four seasons in the Russian Superleague, where he won a championship with the Metallurg Magnitogorsk during the 2000-01 season. He joined Titan Klin of the VHL in 2004 and remained with the team until his retirement in 2008. Since his retirement, Voronov became an assistant coach with HC MVD and later became head coach of Buran Voronezh.",
"score": "1.2985795"
},
{
"id": "26064234",
"title": "Sport in Pakistan",
"text": " Vovinam is a emerging sport in Pakistan, Pakistan Vovinam Federation is the governing body of Vovinam in Pakistan, Federation is non profit organization which is coordinate with Punjab Sindh Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Baluchistan Islamabad Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-bultistan provinces Vovinam Associations. Pakistani Vovinam team also Participated in international Vovinam Championships and got silver and bronze medals, 2013 and 2019.",
"score": "1.2952102"
},
{
"id": "28446167",
"title": "Toki (video game)",
"text": " to travel through murky lakes, steep canyons, over frozen ice-capped mountain ranges and lava-spewing volcanoes alike. To progress in his quest and be ultimately victorious, Toki will have to battle all manner of dangerous wild animals and various mutants of Vookimedlo's creation; not to mention Vookimedlo's own abominable guardians who act as level bosses. In some ports of the game, Toki was named \"JuJu\", Miho was named \"Wanda\" and Vookimedlo was named \"Dr. Stark\". Also, in some ports it was not Vookimedlo who kidnaps princess Miho, but his chief henchman, the half-invisible giant known as Bashtar. In some ports Bashtar was the final boss of the game, and not Vookimedlo.",
"score": "1.2869596"
},
{
"id": "30612860",
"title": "Oosterhout",
"text": " • VOKO, Volleyball • ATV Scorpio, Athletics • SCO-Tofs, Football • TSC, Football • VV Oosterhout, Football • De Warande, Hockey • OZ&PC De Warande, Swimming and Water polo • De Voltreffers, Korfball • De Glaskoning Twins, Baseball",
"score": "1.2796797"
},
{
"id": "26698858",
"title": "2008 Kazakhstan Premier League",
"text": " 2, 2–2) and Shakhter vs. Okzhetpes (Round 3, 2–1) were awarded against Okzhetpes because of unknown reasons. ; match_OKZ_VOS_note=OKZ_AKT ; match_SHA_OKZ_note=OKZ_AKT match_KRT_VOS_note=The games have been counted as lost with a score of 3–0 for Vostok because of their participation in a fixed game with Shakhter. ; match_MEG_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_TOB_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AKT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AST_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_IRT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_OKZ_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_ZHE_note=KRT_VOS match_SHA_VOS_note=The result of the game (Shakhter 2–1 Vostok) has been discarded. match_MEG_ZHE_note=The games Megasport vs. Zhetysu (Round 1, 2–1) and Megasport vs. Astana (Round 2, 0–0) were awarded against Megasport because they fielded two ineligible players. ; match_MEG_AST_note=MEG_ZHE update=complete ; source=kff.kz {{#invoke:sports results|main }}",
"score": "1.2792854"
},
{
"id": "14469164",
"title": "Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game",
"text": " The U.S. street basketball team named Jabberwock (ジャバウォック) came to Japan and played a friendly match with the Japanese team (Strky (スターキー)), but after the Japanese team suffered a crushing defeat, Jabberwock team members began to mock the Japanese basketball. Their comments infuriated Riko's father, so he assembled a team of five Generation of Miracles members plus Tetsuya Kuroko and Taiga Kagami, called Vorpal Swords (ヴォルパル・ソード), to perform a Revenge match (リベンジ • マッチ) against Jabberwock.",
"score": "1.2652025"
},
{
"id": "8139328",
"title": "Reta Vortaro",
"text": "Thus, at reta-vortaro.de/revo/art/pilk.html one can find the meaning of pilko (ball), along with the derived forms piedpilkado (Association football or soccer) and piedpilko (soccer ball); korbopilkado (the sport of basketball) and korbopilko (the ball used in that game; manpilkado (handball, the game) and manpilko (the ball used for playing handball); and flugpilkado (the sport of volleyball) and flugpilko (the ball used in volleyball). The page also shows equivalents for the word pilko in English (\"ball\"), as well as in 17 other languages. One who knows the Esperanto root-form of a word (for nouns, this is the word without the -o ending; for adjectives, the word without the -a ending) can look up a web page giving the Esperanto word's meanings, along with related words and example sentences. ",
"score": "1.2644325"
},
{
"id": "26996634",
"title": "Alexei Voronov",
"text": " Voronov began his career with his hometown team Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg who later became Spartak Yekaterinburg and Dinamo-Energija Yekaterinburg. He played with the team from 1993 to 2003, playing in the Russian Superleague until their relegation to the Vysshaya Liga 2001. He then moved to Sputnik Nizhny Tagil of the Vysshaya Liga in 2003 and stayed for four seasons before returning to Yekaterinburg in 2007 to join Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, a new team founded the previous year to replace the former Dinamo-Energija team that folded in 2006. He then spent a season with Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk before returning to Avtomobilist for the 2009–10 KHL season, playing 44 games and scoring ",
"score": "1.2640461"
},
{
"id": "25592139",
"title": "Slava Voynov",
"text": " Voynov has played for Russia at the World Under-18 Tournament, the World Junior Tournament, the 2014 Olympics and the 2016 World Championship. He was a member of the Russian team at the 2018 Winter Olympics and won the gold medal.",
"score": "1.2638292"
},
{
"id": "14608952",
"title": "List of Kuroko's Basketball characters",
"text": " an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. The rest of Seirin's team, Furihata, Fukuda and Kawahara see extremely limited playing time due to the skill of their starters (only the former has ever played in a game) and are mostly found on the bench. However, Furihata played an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. Riko Aida (相田 リコ) ; , Ayumi Fujimura (VOMIC) ; Riko, the team's coach, is a second-year student. One reason for her unique position as a ",
"score": "1.2621815"
},
{
"id": "14519440",
"title": "Madagascar",
"text": " A number of traditional pastimes have emerged in Madagascar. Moraingy, a type of hand-to-hand combat, is a popular spectator sport in coastal regions. It is traditionally practiced by men, but women have recently begun to participate. The wrestling of zebu cattle, which is named savika or tolon-omby, is also practiced in many regions. In addition to sports, a wide variety of games are played. Among the most emblematic is fanorona, a board game widespread throughout the Highland regions. According to folk legend, the succession of King Andrianjaka after his father Ralambo was partially the result of the obsession that Andrianjaka's older brother may have had with playing fanorona to the detriment of his other responsibilities. Western recreational activities were introduced to Madagascar over the past two centuries. Rugby union is considered the national sport of Madagascar. Soccer is also popular. Madagascar has produced a ",
"score": "1.2614034"
},
{
"id": "13453028",
"title": "Yan Kuzenok",
"text": " Yan is a student of the Faculty of Physical Education and Sports in Podolsk Sports and Social Institute, graduate of the Kontakt sports club (Novy Urengoy). As of December 16, 2014, he held 128 games and scored 22 goals for Dina Moscow. He played his 50th game in the XXI Russian Championship on March 3, 2013, in Yekaterinburg against Sinara. His 100th game was within the playoffs of the XXII Russian Championship on June 1, 2014, in Troitsk against “Gazprom-Yugra”.",
"score": "1.2595356"
},
{
"id": "5564404",
"title": "Roman Volod'kov",
"text": " Roman Volod'kov (Роман Володьков; born August 12, 1973 in Zaporizhzhia) is a retired diver from Ukraine, who represented his native country in three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1996. He won a bronze medal in the synchronized 10m platform event at the 2001 World Aquatics Championships and a silver medal in the same event at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships.",
"score": "1.2589447"
},
{
"id": "3472316",
"title": "Valentina Vorontsova",
"text": " Valentina Grigoryevna Vorontsova (Валентина Григорьевна Воронцова, born 26 July 1982) is a Russian female water polo player. She was a member of the Russia women's national water polo team, playing as goalkeeper. She was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and 2008 Summer Olympics. On club level she played for Kinef Kirishi in Russia.",
"score": "1.2581115"
}
] | [
"VOKO-Irodion\n VOKO-Irodion is a volleyball club from Oosterhout. VOKO was founded in 1974 as an agreement between former Oosterhout volleyball clubs LEC and RELAX. The first team plays in the Dutch third division, and their goal is promote to the national divisions.",
"Nikko Landeros\n Nikko Landeros (born April 28, 1989) is an ice sled hockey player and paralympic freestyle skier from the United States. He took part in the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver, where USA won gold. They beat Japan 2-0 in the final. He was also on the team USA in the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, which won gold by beating Russia 1-0 in the final. He and his best friend Tyler Carron had an accident when they were 17. Both lost their legs. His father is a native of Mexico and his mother is from Milan, Italy.",
"Spirydion Albański\n Spirydion Jan Albański (4 October 1907 – 30 March 1992), nicknamed \"Spirytus\" and \"Romek\", was a Polish football goalkeeper in the 1930s. He played for Pogoń Lwów and the Polish National Team. Albański was born in Lwów (Lviv). He graduated from high school after the Second World War, when he was forced to move from Lwów to Upper Silesia, worked in the coal-mining industry. He was later a civil servant, and also a soccer coach.",
"Serhiy Vovkodav\n Serhiy Vovkodav (Сергій Васильович Вовкодав; born 2 July 1988) is a Ukrainian professional football defender who plays for FC Poltava in the Ukrainian First League. Playing in the youth competitions of the Ukrainian Premier League in 2006–2013, on 27 May 2021 retained its record with the most games in competitions among under-21 teams.",
"A1 Belarus\n Amediateka, START, ivi, The Walt Disney Studios movies and cartoons. The service is accessible from Android and iOS mobile devices, Smart TV running on Tizen, WebOS, Android TV, on RedboxMini, Xiaomi Mi Box 3, Apple TV (via AirPlay) boxes. Desktop users can access the video service via the VOKA application for Windows or on the website. In 2018, VOKA launched proprietary media content: \"Our Football\" and \"Our Hockey\" offering broadcasts of games with Belarusian clubs and national teams, live streaming of concerts, music festivals, conferences and forums, as well as cyber sports tournaments in the section \"Cybersport\". Also available for ",
"Evgeny Voronov\n Voronov is also a member of the senior Russian national basketball team. He competed with the team for the first time at the 2010 FIBA World Championship after previously making appearances with the junior national team, including helping the team to a gold medal at the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He was part of the Russian team that won the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Sergei Voronov (ice hockey)\n the 1992-93 season. Voronov remained with the Thunder for the remainder of the season, scoring six points in 40 games but did not play any games in the postseason. After two seasons in the North American minor leagues, Voronov returned to Russia. Voronov spent the next 10 out of his 11 seasons in Russia, including four seasons in the Russian Superleague, where he won a championship with the Metallurg Magnitogorsk during the 2000-01 season. He joined Titan Klin of the VHL in 2004 and remained with the team until his retirement in 2008. Since his retirement, Voronov became an assistant coach with HC MVD and later became head coach of Buran Voronezh.",
"Sport in Pakistan\n Vovinam is a emerging sport in Pakistan, Pakistan Vovinam Federation is the governing body of Vovinam in Pakistan, Federation is non profit organization which is coordinate with Punjab Sindh Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Baluchistan Islamabad Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-bultistan provinces Vovinam Associations. Pakistani Vovinam team also Participated in international Vovinam Championships and got silver and bronze medals, 2013 and 2019.",
"Toki (video game)\n to travel through murky lakes, steep canyons, over frozen ice-capped mountain ranges and lava-spewing volcanoes alike. To progress in his quest and be ultimately victorious, Toki will have to battle all manner of dangerous wild animals and various mutants of Vookimedlo's creation; not to mention Vookimedlo's own abominable guardians who act as level bosses. In some ports of the game, Toki was named \"JuJu\", Miho was named \"Wanda\" and Vookimedlo was named \"Dr. Stark\". Also, in some ports it was not Vookimedlo who kidnaps princess Miho, but his chief henchman, the half-invisible giant known as Bashtar. In some ports Bashtar was the final boss of the game, and not Vookimedlo.",
"Oosterhout\n • VOKO, Volleyball • ATV Scorpio, Athletics • SCO-Tofs, Football • TSC, Football • VV Oosterhout, Football • De Warande, Hockey • OZ&PC De Warande, Swimming and Water polo • De Voltreffers, Korfball • De Glaskoning Twins, Baseball",
"2008 Kazakhstan Premier League\n 2, 2–2) and Shakhter vs. Okzhetpes (Round 3, 2–1) were awarded against Okzhetpes because of unknown reasons. ; match_OKZ_VOS_note=OKZ_AKT ; match_SHA_OKZ_note=OKZ_AKT match_KRT_VOS_note=The games have been counted as lost with a score of 3–0 for Vostok because of their participation in a fixed game with Shakhter. ; match_MEG_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_TOB_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AKT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AST_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_IRT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_OKZ_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_ZHE_note=KRT_VOS match_SHA_VOS_note=The result of the game (Shakhter 2–1 Vostok) has been discarded. match_MEG_ZHE_note=The games Megasport vs. Zhetysu (Round 1, 2–1) and Megasport vs. Astana (Round 2, 0–0) were awarded against Megasport because they fielded two ineligible players. ; match_MEG_AST_note=MEG_ZHE update=complete ; source=kff.kz {{#invoke:sports results|main }}",
"Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game\n The U.S. street basketball team named Jabberwock (ジャバウォック) came to Japan and played a friendly match with the Japanese team (Strky (スターキー)), but after the Japanese team suffered a crushing defeat, Jabberwock team members began to mock the Japanese basketball. Their comments infuriated Riko's father, so he assembled a team of five Generation of Miracles members plus Tetsuya Kuroko and Taiga Kagami, called Vorpal Swords (ヴォルパル・ソード), to perform a Revenge match (リベンジ • マッチ) against Jabberwock.",
"Reta Vortaro\nThus, at reta-vortaro.de/revo/art/pilk.html one can find the meaning of pilko (ball), along with the derived forms piedpilkado (Association football or soccer) and piedpilko (soccer ball); korbopilkado (the sport of basketball) and korbopilko (the ball used in that game; manpilkado (handball, the game) and manpilko (the ball used for playing handball); and flugpilkado (the sport of volleyball) and flugpilko (the ball used in volleyball). The page also shows equivalents for the word pilko in English (\"ball\"), as well as in 17 other languages. One who knows the Esperanto root-form of a word (for nouns, this is the word without the -o ending; for adjectives, the word without the -a ending) can look up a web page giving the Esperanto word's meanings, along with related words and example sentences. ",
"Alexei Voronov\n Voronov began his career with his hometown team Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg who later became Spartak Yekaterinburg and Dinamo-Energija Yekaterinburg. He played with the team from 1993 to 2003, playing in the Russian Superleague until their relegation to the Vysshaya Liga 2001. He then moved to Sputnik Nizhny Tagil of the Vysshaya Liga in 2003 and stayed for four seasons before returning to Yekaterinburg in 2007 to join Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, a new team founded the previous year to replace the former Dinamo-Energija team that folded in 2006. He then spent a season with Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk before returning to Avtomobilist for the 2009–10 KHL season, playing 44 games and scoring ",
"Slava Voynov\n Voynov has played for Russia at the World Under-18 Tournament, the World Junior Tournament, the 2014 Olympics and the 2016 World Championship. He was a member of the Russian team at the 2018 Winter Olympics and won the gold medal.",
"List of Kuroko's Basketball characters\n an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. The rest of Seirin's team, Furihata, Fukuda and Kawahara see extremely limited playing time due to the skill of their starters (only the former has ever played in a game) and are mostly found on the bench. However, Furihata played an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. Riko Aida (相田 リコ) ; , Ayumi Fujimura (VOMIC) ; Riko, the team's coach, is a second-year student. One reason for her unique position as a ",
"Madagascar\n A number of traditional pastimes have emerged in Madagascar. Moraingy, a type of hand-to-hand combat, is a popular spectator sport in coastal regions. It is traditionally practiced by men, but women have recently begun to participate. The wrestling of zebu cattle, which is named savika or tolon-omby, is also practiced in many regions. In addition to sports, a wide variety of games are played. Among the most emblematic is fanorona, a board game widespread throughout the Highland regions. According to folk legend, the succession of King Andrianjaka after his father Ralambo was partially the result of the obsession that Andrianjaka's older brother may have had with playing fanorona to the detriment of his other responsibilities. Western recreational activities were introduced to Madagascar over the past two centuries. Rugby union is considered the national sport of Madagascar. Soccer is also popular. Madagascar has produced a ",
"Yan Kuzenok\n Yan is a student of the Faculty of Physical Education and Sports in Podolsk Sports and Social Institute, graduate of the Kontakt sports club (Novy Urengoy). As of December 16, 2014, he held 128 games and scored 22 goals for Dina Moscow. He played his 50th game in the XXI Russian Championship on March 3, 2013, in Yekaterinburg against Sinara. His 100th game was within the playoffs of the XXII Russian Championship on June 1, 2014, in Troitsk against “Gazprom-Yugra”.",
"Roman Volod'kov\n Roman Volod'kov (Роман Володьков; born August 12, 1973 in Zaporizhzhia) is a retired diver from Ukraine, who represented his native country in three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1996. He won a bronze medal in the synchronized 10m platform event at the 2001 World Aquatics Championships and a silver medal in the same event at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships.",
"Valentina Vorontsova\n Valentina Grigoryevna Vorontsova (Валентина Григорьевна Воронцова, born 26 July 1982) is a Russian female water polo player. She was a member of the Russia women's national water polo team, playing as goalkeeper. She was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and 2008 Summer Olympics. On club level she played for Kinef Kirishi in Russia."
] |
What sport does Paul Chapman play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Paul Chapman (footballer, born 1951) | 901,152 | 53 | [
{
"id": "11417027",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Paul Chapman (born 5 November 1981) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Geelong Football Club and Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).",
"score": "1.7583131"
},
{
"id": "11417028",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Chapman played with North Coburg Saints Football Club which merged with Fawkner Park to become Northern Saints Football Club in the EDFL, he also played with the Calder Cannons in the TAC Cup.",
"score": "1.7485499"
},
{
"id": "11417030",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " In 2003 Chapman officially joined the Geelong senior team playing all 22 games of the season. Chapman played his best game for the season in round 7 against the West Coast Eagles where he kicked 4 goals, Chapman also kicked a last minute game-winning goal against Richmond in Round 15. Chapman would play his 50th career game in round 21 against the Brisbane Lions. At the end of the 2003 season Chapman would be named best team and constructive player, he would also finish 8th in Geelong's Best and Fairest. 2004 would be Chapman's first AFL finals experience with Geelong making it all the way to the Preliminary Final only to be defeated by 9 points against the Brisbane lions, Chapman would play all 22 games of the season including all 3 finals. Chapman had double figure possessions in every game except one, he also kicked 38 goals for ",
"score": "1.6901202"
},
{
"id": "11417036",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Chapman played 20 games in the 2012 season kicking 36 goals. Geelong would finish 6th on the AFL ladder only to be eliminated in the first week losing to Fremantle by 16 points. Chapman wasn't very effective in this game only collecting 11 disposals. In 2013, Chapman only played eight games due to a hamstring injury, he kicked 12 goals for the season. Returning from injury as a sub in Round 22, he made an impact off the bench. Geelong finished 2nd on the ladder and he played his 250th game in the Qualifying Final against Fremantle where they lost by 15 points, the next week Geelong defeated Port Adelaide by 16 points in the Semi Finals advancing to the Preliminary Finals, only to lose to Hawthorn by 5 points. Chapman missed the game due to suspension. Chapman was delisted by Geelong on 2 October 2013, after strongly suggesting he wanted to play on, but Geelong's final thoughts were that he couldn't compete at top-level football anymore due to age.",
"score": "1.661675"
},
{
"id": "11417037",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " On 18 October 2013, Chapman joined after being traded for pick 84. The Geelong champion couldn't have started his career at the Bombers any better, kicking four goals to lead Essendon to a round 1 win over North Melbourne. He continued to have a presence around goals for the Bombers, booting 22 goals from 20 games. He finished the season well after a quieter patch. Chapman would play in Essendon's first week elimination final against North Melbourne he booted 2 goals and collected 22 disposals despite Essendon losing by 12 points and being eliminated from the finals. The 33-year-old signed a one-year contract extension to play on in 2015. Chapman's 2015 season was plagued with injuries as he would only play 8 games. On 25 August 2015, Chapman announced that he would retire after the club's round 22 home match against. After the round 22 game Chapman was carried off the field by his teammates to a standing ovation by the crowd.",
"score": "1.6520162"
},
{
"id": "11417029",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Chapman was selected by Geelong Football Club with pick 31 in the 1999 AFL Draft. He played 4 games, making his debut in round 12, 2000 against, and kicked his first goal in the Elimination Final against , he finished 3rd in the Carji Greeves Medal. Chapman continued his improvement in the 2001 season where he would play 9 games for the season and kick two goals in Geelong's round 9 clash with Richmond. Chapman's 2002 season was his breakout season he would go on to play 16 games for the season 15 of those games were the last 15 of the season. In round 9 Chapman would collect 26 disposals and also kick three goals this was Chapman's first ever 20+ possession game. At the end of the 2002 season Chapman was named Geelong's most improved player he would also finish 8th in Geelong's best and fairest award. Chapman was also a member of Geelong's VFL premiership team.",
"score": "1.6398053"
},
{
"id": "11417033",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " career goal in round 21 against. Chapman played 19 games for the season and kicked 33 goals, a quarter of the way through Chapman played for the Victorian state team in the AFL Hall of Fame Tribute Match, the Victoria team won by 17 points. Geelong won the McClelland Trophy for the second year in a row, Chapman had 22 possessions and 1 goal, in the 2008 AFL Grand Final loss to Hawthorn by 26 points. At the start of the 2009 season, Geelong won the AFL Pre-Season Premiership defeating Collingwood by 76 points. Chapman played 20 games for the season and kicked 31 goals for the year, Chapman also had a career high 41 disposals in round 6 and ",
"score": "1.625767"
},
{
"id": "11417032",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Chapman picked up double figure possessions in every game he played he also booted 30 goals for the season, in round 12 he would boot his 100th career goal against the Brisbane Lions. Geelong finished first at the end of the season winning the McClelland Trophy. In Geelongs first qualifying final Chapman would kick 5 goals leading Geelong to a record-breaking 106-point victory. Chapman capped off his season by kicking 4 goals and taking an all-time great mark on the members flank in the 2007 AFL Grand Final helping his team claim a record 119-point victory over. Chapman was runner up in the Norm Smith Medal count. Chapman played his 150th game in round 16, 2008 against the and kicked his ",
"score": "1.6219611"
},
{
"id": "11417031",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " season with multiple goals in 12 games. Chapman would finish the season 9th in Geelongs Best and Fairest award. Chapman would only play 19 games in the 2005 season after he suffered an injury in round 19, Chapman would go on to miss the remaining 3 games and the finals series. Even though he was injured late in the season Chapman still booted 29 goals for the season kicking a goal in every game except one, Chapman would go on to finish 6th in Geelong's Best and Fairest award. His 2006 season started well, winning the AFL Pre-Season Premiership defeating by 8 points, he played his 100th game in round 5 against, losing by 22 points. At the end of the year Chapman won the Carji Greeves Medal polling 462 votes, ahead of Jimmy Bartel and Gary Ablett, Jr. and he polled 14 votes in the Brownlow Medal.",
"score": "1.6193713"
},
{
"id": "8569757",
"title": "Mark Chapman (broadcaster)",
"text": " Mark Andrew Chapman (nicknamed Chappers) (born 11 October 1973) is a British television and radio presenter who, mainly working in sport, presents Match of the Day 2 and also hosts Saturday afternoons plus The Monday Night Club on 5 live Sport.",
"score": "1.6164615"
},
{
"id": "11417035",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " ladder and go all the way to the Preliminary Final but were eliminated by Collingwood after losing by 41 points. Chapman would have 21 disposals and 1 goal in the game. Chapman played all 23 games of the 2011 season including 3 finals, he played his 200th game in Round 2 against. Geelong finished 2nd on the ladder for the 3rd year in a row, they defeated Hawthorn in the Qualifying Final by 31 points, after a one-week break they went on to defeat in the Preliminary Final, they won by 48 points. For the fourth time in five years they made the Grand Final, where Chapman capped off his season with his third Premiership defeating Collingwood by 38 points.",
"score": "1.6029739"
},
{
"id": "11417041",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " 536 || 130 || 53 || 1.9 || 0.9 || 17.1 || 9.7 || 26.8 || 6.5 || 2.7 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 24 || 23 || 16 || 412 || 264 || 676 || 133 || 99 || 1.0 || 0.7 || 17.2 || 11.0 || 28.2 || 5.5 || 4.1 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 23 || 24 || 14 || 312 || 228 || 540 || 122 || 104 || 1.0 || 0.6 || 13.6 || 9.9 || 23.5 || 5.3 || 4.5 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 21 || 36 || 15 || 292 || 136 || 428 || 107 ",
"score": "1.599864"
},
{
"id": "11809772",
"title": "Sam Chapman",
"text": " For the Australian rules footballer, see Sam Chapman (footballer). For the British speedway rider, see Sam Chapman (speedway rider). Samuel Blake Chapman (April 11, 1916 – December 22, 2006) was an American two-sport athletic star who played as a center fielder in Major League Baseball, spending nearly his entire career with the Philadelphia Athletics (1938–1941, 1945–1951). He batted and threw right-handed, leading the American League in putouts four times. He was previously an All-American college football player at the University of California.",
"score": "1.5726308"
},
{
"id": "28161508",
"title": "Nathan Chapman (footballer)",
"text": " time to bulk up his body, Chapman was often tried in the forward line with some success. After injury and inconsistent form, Chapman was traded in 1997 to the Hawthorn Hawks having played just 49 games for the Bears and 11 with the Lions. Injury again struck and Chapman was relegated to the Victorian Football League affiliate before being eventually delisted in 2000 having played only 16 senior games with the Hawks. In 2004, a few years after being delisted by the Hawks, and after many months of practice, Chapman went to the United States, where he was signed by the Green Bay Packers as a free agent. Chapman played in 3 ",
"score": "1.567788"
},
{
"id": "8653617",
"title": "Jay Chapman (soccer)",
"text": " Jay Tyler Chapman (born January 1, 1994) is a Canadian professional soccer player who plays as a midfielder.",
"score": "1.5669068"
},
{
"id": "11417042",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " 94 || 1.7 || 0.7 || 13.9 || 6.5 || 20.4 || 5.1 || 4.5 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 8 || 12 || 7 || 91 || 71 || 162 || 27 || 34 || 1.5 || 0.9 || 11.4 || 8.9 || 20.3 || 3.4 || 4.3 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 3 || 20 || 22 || 16 || 250 || 148 || 398 || 112 || 83 || 1.1 || 0.8 || 12.5 || 7.4 || 19.9 || 5.6 || 4.2 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 3 || 9 || 8 || 4 || 74 || 51 || 125 || 23 || 31 || 0.9 || 0.4 || 8.2 ",
"score": "1.5602965"
},
{
"id": "11417040",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " 31 || 19 || 331 || 153 || 484 || 134 || 89 || 1.4 || 0.9 || 15.0 || 7.0 || 22.0 || 6.1 || 4.0 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 30 || 15 || 289 || 127 || 416 || 112 || 75 || 1.6 || 0.8 || 15.2 || 6.7 || 21.9 || 5.9 || 3.9 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 33 || 13 || 253 || 131 || 384 || 102 || 54 || 1.7 || 0.7 || 13.3 || 6.9 || 20.2 || 5.4 || 2.8 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 20 || 37 || 17 || 342 || 194 ",
"score": "1.5598286"
},
{
"id": "12017564",
"title": "Mitchell Chapman",
"text": " During school his years, Chapman played cricket and represented Queensland at under 17 and 19 age groups. He lists other interests as golf, fishing, surfing and bird watching. In 2010 he completed a Bachelor of Commerce (finance) at the University of Southern Queensland.",
"score": "1.5577552"
},
{
"id": "11417039",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": " 35 || 22 || 22 || 15 || 239 || 103 || 342 || 85 || 58 || 1.0 || 0.7 || 10.9 || 4.7 || 15.5 || 3.9 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 25 || 38 || 19 || 240 || 113 || 353 || 96 || 80 || 1.5 || 0.8 || 9.6 || 4.5 || 14.1 || 3.8 || 3.2 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 29 || 17 || 222 || 97 || 319 || 76 || 49 || 1.5 || 0.9 || 11.7 || 5.1 || 16.8 || 4.0 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 22 ",
"score": "1.523475"
},
{
"id": "11417038",
"title": "Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)",
"text": "- style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 4 || 1 || 0 || 14 || 7 || 21 || 4 || 8 || 0.3 || 0.0 || 3.5 || 1.8 || 5.3 || 1.0 || 2.0 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 9 || 4 || 4 || 56 || 22 || 78 || 18 || 23 || 0.4 || 0.4 || 6.2 || 2.4 || 8.7 || 2.0 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 16 || 16 || 5 || 178 || 79 || 257 || 46 || 52 || 1.0 || 0.3 || 11.1 || 4.9 || 16.1 || 2.9 || 3.3 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ",
"score": "1.522085"
}
] | [
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n Paul Chapman (born 5 November 1981) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Geelong Football Club and Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n Chapman played with North Coburg Saints Football Club which merged with Fawkner Park to become Northern Saints Football Club in the EDFL, he also played with the Calder Cannons in the TAC Cup.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n In 2003 Chapman officially joined the Geelong senior team playing all 22 games of the season. Chapman played his best game for the season in round 7 against the West Coast Eagles where he kicked 4 goals, Chapman also kicked a last minute game-winning goal against Richmond in Round 15. Chapman would play his 50th career game in round 21 against the Brisbane Lions. At the end of the 2003 season Chapman would be named best team and constructive player, he would also finish 8th in Geelong's Best and Fairest. 2004 would be Chapman's first AFL finals experience with Geelong making it all the way to the Preliminary Final only to be defeated by 9 points against the Brisbane lions, Chapman would play all 22 games of the season including all 3 finals. Chapman had double figure possessions in every game except one, he also kicked 38 goals for ",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n Chapman played 20 games in the 2012 season kicking 36 goals. Geelong would finish 6th on the AFL ladder only to be eliminated in the first week losing to Fremantle by 16 points. Chapman wasn't very effective in this game only collecting 11 disposals. In 2013, Chapman only played eight games due to a hamstring injury, he kicked 12 goals for the season. Returning from injury as a sub in Round 22, he made an impact off the bench. Geelong finished 2nd on the ladder and he played his 250th game in the Qualifying Final against Fremantle where they lost by 15 points, the next week Geelong defeated Port Adelaide by 16 points in the Semi Finals advancing to the Preliminary Finals, only to lose to Hawthorn by 5 points. Chapman missed the game due to suspension. Chapman was delisted by Geelong on 2 October 2013, after strongly suggesting he wanted to play on, but Geelong's final thoughts were that he couldn't compete at top-level football anymore due to age.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n On 18 October 2013, Chapman joined after being traded for pick 84. The Geelong champion couldn't have started his career at the Bombers any better, kicking four goals to lead Essendon to a round 1 win over North Melbourne. He continued to have a presence around goals for the Bombers, booting 22 goals from 20 games. He finished the season well after a quieter patch. Chapman would play in Essendon's first week elimination final against North Melbourne he booted 2 goals and collected 22 disposals despite Essendon losing by 12 points and being eliminated from the finals. The 33-year-old signed a one-year contract extension to play on in 2015. Chapman's 2015 season was plagued with injuries as he would only play 8 games. On 25 August 2015, Chapman announced that he would retire after the club's round 22 home match against. After the round 22 game Chapman was carried off the field by his teammates to a standing ovation by the crowd.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n Chapman was selected by Geelong Football Club with pick 31 in the 1999 AFL Draft. He played 4 games, making his debut in round 12, 2000 against, and kicked his first goal in the Elimination Final against , he finished 3rd in the Carji Greeves Medal. Chapman continued his improvement in the 2001 season where he would play 9 games for the season and kick two goals in Geelong's round 9 clash with Richmond. Chapman's 2002 season was his breakout season he would go on to play 16 games for the season 15 of those games were the last 15 of the season. In round 9 Chapman would collect 26 disposals and also kick three goals this was Chapman's first ever 20+ possession game. At the end of the 2002 season Chapman was named Geelong's most improved player he would also finish 8th in Geelong's best and fairest award. Chapman was also a member of Geelong's VFL premiership team.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n career goal in round 21 against. Chapman played 19 games for the season and kicked 33 goals, a quarter of the way through Chapman played for the Victorian state team in the AFL Hall of Fame Tribute Match, the Victoria team won by 17 points. Geelong won the McClelland Trophy for the second year in a row, Chapman had 22 possessions and 1 goal, in the 2008 AFL Grand Final loss to Hawthorn by 26 points. At the start of the 2009 season, Geelong won the AFL Pre-Season Premiership defeating Collingwood by 76 points. Chapman played 20 games for the season and kicked 31 goals for the year, Chapman also had a career high 41 disposals in round 6 and ",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n Chapman picked up double figure possessions in every game he played he also booted 30 goals for the season, in round 12 he would boot his 100th career goal against the Brisbane Lions. Geelong finished first at the end of the season winning the McClelland Trophy. In Geelongs first qualifying final Chapman would kick 5 goals leading Geelong to a record-breaking 106-point victory. Chapman capped off his season by kicking 4 goals and taking an all-time great mark on the members flank in the 2007 AFL Grand Final helping his team claim a record 119-point victory over. Chapman was runner up in the Norm Smith Medal count. Chapman played his 150th game in round 16, 2008 against the and kicked his ",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n season with multiple goals in 12 games. Chapman would finish the season 9th in Geelongs Best and Fairest award. Chapman would only play 19 games in the 2005 season after he suffered an injury in round 19, Chapman would go on to miss the remaining 3 games and the finals series. Even though he was injured late in the season Chapman still booted 29 goals for the season kicking a goal in every game except one, Chapman would go on to finish 6th in Geelong's Best and Fairest award. His 2006 season started well, winning the AFL Pre-Season Premiership defeating by 8 points, he played his 100th game in round 5 against, losing by 22 points. At the end of the year Chapman won the Carji Greeves Medal polling 462 votes, ahead of Jimmy Bartel and Gary Ablett, Jr. and he polled 14 votes in the Brownlow Medal.",
"Mark Chapman (broadcaster)\n Mark Andrew Chapman (nicknamed Chappers) (born 11 October 1973) is a British television and radio presenter who, mainly working in sport, presents Match of the Day 2 and also hosts Saturday afternoons plus The Monday Night Club on 5 live Sport.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n ladder and go all the way to the Preliminary Final but were eliminated by Collingwood after losing by 41 points. Chapman would have 21 disposals and 1 goal in the game. Chapman played all 23 games of the 2011 season including 3 finals, he played his 200th game in Round 2 against. Geelong finished 2nd on the ladder for the 3rd year in a row, they defeated Hawthorn in the Qualifying Final by 31 points, after a one-week break they went on to defeat in the Preliminary Final, they won by 48 points. For the fourth time in five years they made the Grand Final, where Chapman capped off his season with his third Premiership defeating Collingwood by 38 points.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n 536 || 130 || 53 || 1.9 || 0.9 || 17.1 || 9.7 || 26.8 || 6.5 || 2.7 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 24 || 23 || 16 || 412 || 264 || 676 || 133 || 99 || 1.0 || 0.7 || 17.2 || 11.0 || 28.2 || 5.5 || 4.1 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 23 || 24 || 14 || 312 || 228 || 540 || 122 || 104 || 1.0 || 0.6 || 13.6 || 9.9 || 23.5 || 5.3 || 4.5 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 21 || 36 || 15 || 292 || 136 || 428 || 107 ",
"Sam Chapman\n For the Australian rules footballer, see Sam Chapman (footballer). For the British speedway rider, see Sam Chapman (speedway rider). Samuel Blake Chapman (April 11, 1916 – December 22, 2006) was an American two-sport athletic star who played as a center fielder in Major League Baseball, spending nearly his entire career with the Philadelphia Athletics (1938–1941, 1945–1951). He batted and threw right-handed, leading the American League in putouts four times. He was previously an All-American college football player at the University of California.",
"Nathan Chapman (footballer)\n time to bulk up his body, Chapman was often tried in the forward line with some success. After injury and inconsistent form, Chapman was traded in 1997 to the Hawthorn Hawks having played just 49 games for the Bears and 11 with the Lions. Injury again struck and Chapman was relegated to the Victorian Football League affiliate before being eventually delisted in 2000 having played only 16 senior games with the Hawks. In 2004, a few years after being delisted by the Hawks, and after many months of practice, Chapman went to the United States, where he was signed by the Green Bay Packers as a free agent. Chapman played in 3 ",
"Jay Chapman (soccer)\n Jay Tyler Chapman (born January 1, 1994) is a Canadian professional soccer player who plays as a midfielder.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n 94 || 1.7 || 0.7 || 13.9 || 6.5 || 20.4 || 5.1 || 4.5 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 8 || 12 || 7 || 91 || 71 || 162 || 27 || 34 || 1.5 || 0.9 || 11.4 || 8.9 || 20.3 || 3.4 || 4.3 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 3 || 20 || 22 || 16 || 250 || 148 || 398 || 112 || 83 || 1.1 || 0.8 || 12.5 || 7.4 || 19.9 || 5.6 || 4.2 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 3 || 9 || 8 || 4 || 74 || 51 || 125 || 23 || 31 || 0.9 || 0.4 || 8.2 ",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n 31 || 19 || 331 || 153 || 484 || 134 || 89 || 1.4 || 0.9 || 15.0 || 7.0 || 22.0 || 6.1 || 4.0 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 30 || 15 || 289 || 127 || 416 || 112 || 75 || 1.6 || 0.8 || 15.2 || 6.7 || 21.9 || 5.9 || 3.9 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 33 || 13 || 253 || 131 || 384 || 102 || 54 || 1.7 || 0.7 || 13.3 || 6.9 || 20.2 || 5.4 || 2.8 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 20 || 37 || 17 || 342 || 194 ",
"Mitchell Chapman\n During school his years, Chapman played cricket and represented Queensland at under 17 and 19 age groups. He lists other interests as golf, fishing, surfing and bird watching. In 2010 he completed a Bachelor of Commerce (finance) at the University of Southern Queensland.",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n 35 || 22 || 22 || 15 || 239 || 103 || 342 || 85 || 58 || 1.0 || 0.7 || 10.9 || 4.7 || 15.5 || 3.9 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 25 || 38 || 19 || 240 || 113 || 353 || 96 || 80 || 1.5 || 0.8 || 9.6 || 4.5 || 14.1 || 3.8 || 3.2 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 19 || 29 || 17 || 222 || 97 || 319 || 76 || 49 || 1.5 || 0.9 || 11.7 || 5.1 || 16.8 || 4.0 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 22 ",
"Paul Chapman (Australian footballer)\n- style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 4 || 1 || 0 || 14 || 7 || 21 || 4 || 8 || 0.3 || 0.0 || 3.5 || 1.8 || 5.3 || 1.0 || 2.0 style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 9 || 4 || 4 || 56 || 22 || 78 || 18 || 23 || 0.4 || 0.4 || 6.2 || 2.4 || 8.7 || 2.0 || 2.6 ; - style=\"background-color: #EAEAEA\" style=\"text-align:center;\"| ; 35 || 16 || 16 || 5 || 178 || 79 || 257 || 46 || 52 || 1.0 || 0.3 || 11.1 || 4.9 || 16.1 || 2.9 || 3.3 style=\"text-align:center;\"| "
] |
What sport does Guyana women's national field hockey team play? | [
"field hockey",
"hockey"
] | sport | Guyana women's national field hockey team | 1,111,661 | 85 | [
{
"id": "8100909",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2010 – 5th place ; 2014 – 6th place ; 2018 – 7th place ",
"score": "1.9560065"
},
{
"id": "8100908",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2013 – 8th place ",
"score": "1.9365549"
},
{
"id": "8100910",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2011 – ",
"score": "1.9132926"
},
{
"id": "8100907",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national field hockey team represents Guyana in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"score": "1.9062688"
},
{
"id": "674706",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "1971 – 8th place ; 1975 – 7th place ; 1991 – 10th place ",
"score": "1.815131"
},
{
"id": "674705",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Guyana men's national field hockey team represents Guyana in men's international field hockey competitions. The team is controlled by the Guyana Hockey Board, the governing body for field hockey in Guyana.",
"score": "1.792299"
},
{
"id": "30707436",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " The team were three-time NACRA 7s champions in consecutive years from 2008, but dwindled due to lack of funding. The 2016 Olympics renewed interest in building the team.",
"score": "1.7620997"
},
{
"id": "674707",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "1993 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.7562034"
},
{
"id": "674708",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "2015 – 4th place ",
"score": "1.748926"
},
{
"id": "8100896",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1987 – 4th place ; 1991 – 7th place ; 1995 – 5th place ; 1999 – 4th place ; 2003 – 6th place ; 2011 – 7th place ",
"score": "1.688628"
},
{
"id": "30707435",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national rugby union team represents Guyana in the sport of rugby union.",
"score": "1.6867461"
},
{
"id": "8100901",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2012–13 – 25th place ; 2014–15 – 30th place ; 2016–17 – 33rd place ",
"score": "1.6646943"
},
{
"id": "8100900",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1998 – 7th place ; 2010 – 9th place ; 2014 – 10th place ",
"score": "1.6639855"
},
{
"id": "6408011",
"title": "Malaysia women's national field hockey team",
"text": " In 2010, the women's national team is invited to play in Malaysia Junior Hockey League as preparation match before the World Cup qualifier. The following season, the women's national team joined with Bandar Penawar Sports School to enter as a team in Division 2 of MHJL. The women's national hockey team create world record with 36–0 thrashing over Cambodia during a group match in 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Yangon. It is a new world record for the highest score in an international match, last held by Argentina after they defeated Peru 26–0 at the South American Women's Championships in Santiago, Chile, in 2003.",
"score": "1.6636176"
},
{
"id": "16437499",
"title": "Barbados women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1987 – 5th place ; 1991 – 8th place ; 2011 – 8th place ",
"score": "1.648818"
},
{
"id": "16437502",
"title": "Barbados women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1986 – ; 1993 – 4th place ; 1998 – 4th place ; 2002 – ; 2006 – ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.6457977"
},
{
"id": "30707438",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " See Women's international rugby for information about the status of international games and match numbering",
"score": "1.6432154"
},
{
"id": "4690607",
"title": "Guyana women's national football team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national football team is controlled by the Guyana Football Federation. Although the former British colony is located in South America, it competes in CONCACAF.",
"score": "1.6432011"
},
{
"id": "8100898",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1986 – ; 1990 – ; 1993 – ; 2002 – ; 2006 – 4th place ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 4th place ; 2018 – ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.6429329"
},
{
"id": "8100895",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team represents Trinidad and Tobago in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"score": "1.6399082"
}
] | [
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2010 – 5th place ; 2014 – 6th place ; 2018 – 7th place ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2013 – 8th place ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2011 – ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n The Guyana women's national field hockey team represents Guyana in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n1971 – 8th place ; 1975 – 7th place ; 1991 – 10th place ",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n The Guyana men's national field hockey team represents Guyana in men's international field hockey competitions. The team is controlled by the Guyana Hockey Board, the governing body for field hockey in Guyana.",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n The team were three-time NACRA 7s champions in consecutive years from 2008, but dwindled due to lack of funding. The 2016 Olympics renewed interest in building the team.",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n1993 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n2015 – 4th place ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1987 – 4th place ; 1991 – 7th place ; 1995 – 5th place ; 1999 – 4th place ; 2003 – 6th place ; 2011 – 7th place ",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n The Guyana women's national rugby union team represents Guyana in the sport of rugby union.",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n2012–13 – 25th place ; 2014–15 – 30th place ; 2016–17 – 33rd place ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1998 – 7th place ; 2010 – 9th place ; 2014 – 10th place ",
"Malaysia women's national field hockey team\n In 2010, the women's national team is invited to play in Malaysia Junior Hockey League as preparation match before the World Cup qualifier. The following season, the women's national team joined with Bandar Penawar Sports School to enter as a team in Division 2 of MHJL. The women's national hockey team create world record with 36–0 thrashing over Cambodia during a group match in 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Yangon. It is a new world record for the highest score in an international match, last held by Argentina after they defeated Peru 26–0 at the South American Women's Championships in Santiago, Chile, in 2003.",
"Barbados women's national field hockey team\n1987 – 5th place ; 1991 – 8th place ; 2011 – 8th place ",
"Barbados women's national field hockey team\n1986 – ; 1993 – 4th place ; 1998 – 4th place ; 2002 – ; 2006 – ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n See Women's international rugby for information about the status of international games and match numbering",
"Guyana women's national football team\n The Guyana women's national football team is controlled by the Guyana Football Federation. Although the former British colony is located in South America, it competes in CONCACAF.",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1986 – ; 1990 – ; 1993 – ; 2002 – ; 2006 – 4th place ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 4th place ; 2018 – ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n The Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team represents Trinidad and Tobago in women's international field hockey competitions."
] |
What sport does Atanas Atanasov play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Atanas Atanasov (footballer, born 1969) | 323,685 | 94 | [
{
"id": "14535123",
"title": "Atanas Atanasov (basketball)",
"text": " Atanas Atanasov (Атанас Атанасов, 19 November 1935 – 3 September 2021) was a Bulgarian basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1956 Summer Olympics, and the 1960 Summer Olympics. Atanasov died on 3 September 2021, at the age of 85.",
"score": "1.725333"
},
{
"id": "16532867",
"title": "Martin Atanasov",
"text": " Martin Atanasov (Мартин Атанасов) (born 27 September 1996) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team. On club level, he plays for Ziraat Bankası Ankara.",
"score": "1.5867093"
},
{
"id": "12831004",
"title": "Stanimir Atanasov",
"text": " Stanimir Atanasov (Станимир Атанасов) (born 20 April 1976 in Rousse) is a Bulgarian sprint canoer who has competed from 1995 to 2004. He won a bronze medal in the C-4 500 m event at the 1995 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Duisburg. Atanasov was a European bronze medallist in 1997 (C-2) and 2002 (C-1). At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, he earned his best finish of eighth in the C-1 500 m event.",
"score": "1.5677904"
},
{
"id": "24971466",
"title": "Dimo Atanasov",
"text": " Atanasov also played for the Bulgaria national under-21 football team and scored 2 goals - one in a friendly game against Republic of Macedonia and one in a qualification against Ukraine.",
"score": "1.5614645"
},
{
"id": "3969662",
"title": "Zlatozar Atanasov",
"text": " Zlatozar Atanasov (Bulgarian: Златозар Атанасов; born 12 December 1989) is a Bulgarian athlete specialising in the triple jump. He represented his country at the 2013 World Championships without qualifying for the final. In addition, he finished eleventh at the 2012 European Championships and seventh at the 2013 European Indoor Championships. His personal bests in the event are 17.09 metres outdoors (+1.3 m/s, Burgas 2013) and 16.70 metres indoors (Dobrich 2013).",
"score": "1.5549655"
},
{
"id": "27817287",
"title": "Atanas Shopov",
"text": " He was born October 4, 1951, in Dobrovnitsa village near Pazardzhik. He won the silver medal in the 90 kg category at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the bronze at the 1976 Summer Olympics. He also won the bronze at the 1971 European Weightlifting Championships in Sofia, the silver at the 1972 European Championships, and the bronze at the 1973 European Championships. He began training in 1964. Until 1972 he competed for Benkovski Pazardzhik. Then until 1974 for CSKA Sofia, and then until 1976 again for Benkovski. He has set 15 world records for juniors.",
"score": "1.5355294"
},
{
"id": "11489125",
"title": "Andrey Atanasov",
"text": " Andrey Atanasov (Андрей Атанасов; born 9 April 1987) is a Bulgarian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Dimitrovgrad. He previously played for Yantra Gabrovo, Volov Shumen, Chernomorets Pomorie, Lokomotiv Sofia, Banants Yerevan, Botev Vratsa, Lokomotiv Plovdiv and Calisia Kalisz.",
"score": "1.5284669"
},
{
"id": "28154782",
"title": "Valentin Atanasov",
"text": " Valentin Atanasov (Валентин Атанасов, born 7 May 1961) in Kjustendil, Bulgaria is a retired Bulgarian sprinter who specialized in the 100 metres. He won three medals at the European Indoor Championships. His personal best time was 10.15 seconds, achieved in August 1982 in Sofia. This ranks him second among Bulgarian 100 metres sprinters, only behind Petar Petrov. He also competed in the bobsleigh at the 1992 Winter Olympics and the 1994 Winter Olympics.",
"score": "1.5239329"
},
{
"id": "8830095",
"title": "Chavdar Atanasov",
"text": " Chavdar Atanasov (Чавдар Атанасов) (born 3 February 1973, in Vratsa) is a Bulgarian retired football attacking midfielder. On 4 November 1999, he netted a goal for Levski Sofia in the 1:1 away draw with Juventus in the second leg of second round UEFA Cup match, with the \"bluemen\" being eliminated after a 2:4 aggregate score.",
"score": "1.5210245"
},
{
"id": "4417184",
"title": "Atanas Nikolovski",
"text": " Atanas Nikolovski (born 22 June 1980 in Skopje) is a Macedonian slalom canoer who has competed since the mid-1990s. In 2009, Atanas achieved 14th place in the world ranking race in Sydney, Australia. He came 1st in the semi finals, and 7th in the finals of the 2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships. At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, he was the flag-bearer for his nation during the opening ceremonies of those games. In the K-1 event, Nikolovski was eliminated in the qualifying round, finishing in 19th place. Atanas is sponsored by Herbalife.",
"score": "1.5164471"
},
{
"id": "79787",
"title": "Sos Hayrapetyan",
"text": " Hayrapetyan first trained in football and took up field hockey only in 1976. Within a few years, he had grown into one of the leading Soviet players. He started his club career in 1978 with SKA Sverdlovsk. In 1978 and 1979, he placed second at the Soviet championships, and in 1980 won the title. From 1981 to 1987, he played for Dynamo Alma-Ata and from 1988 to 1992 for Hrazdan. From 1978 to 1991, Hayrapetyan was part of the Soviet national team. He won an Olympic bronze medal in 1980, the Intercontinental Cup in 1981, and a silver medal at the 1983 European Championships, losing the final in the penalty shootout. ",
"score": "1.5097713"
},
{
"id": "15158391",
"title": "Zhivko Atanasov",
"text": " Atanasov's mother, Yordanka Donkova, is a former hurdling athlete notable for winning an Olympic gold medal and bronze medal as well as 9 medals at European indoor and outdoor championships.",
"score": "1.5086122"
},
{
"id": "25859662",
"title": "Atanas Gerov",
"text": " Atanas Gerov (Атанас Геров) (born 1945) is a Bulgarian footballer. He was born in Kyustendil. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, where he won a silver medal with the Bulgarian team.",
"score": "1.508286"
},
{
"id": "7714418",
"title": "Atanasov",
"text": "Andrey Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, 1987 ; Atanas Atanasov, runner, born 1945 ; Atanas Atanasov, Bulgarian long jumper, born 1956 ; Atanas Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1985 ; Chavdar Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1973 ; Dimo Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1985 ; Dmitar Atanasov, Bulgarian sprint canoer ; Doncho Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1983 ; Gavril Atanasov, 19th century Yugoslavian icon painter ; Georgi Atanasov (composer), Bulgarian composer, 1882 – 1931 ; Georgi Atanasov (politician), Bulgarian politician and Prime Minister from 1986 - 1990 ; Hristo Atanassov (born 1965), Bulgarian politician ; Hristo Atanasov (Dikanya), Bulgarian revolutionary, 1877 - 1908 ; John Vincent Atanasoff, American physicist and one of the inventors of the computer, 1903 - 1995. ; Kosta Atanasov, a Bulgarian teacher and revolutionary, 1870 - 1912 ; Krassimir ",
"score": "1.5076638"
},
{
"id": "8588200",
"title": "Tsvetan Atanasov",
"text": " Tsvetan Atanasov (Цветан Атанасов) (born 10 April 1948) was a Bulgarian football player who was deployed as a central midfield. He played for CSKA Sofia form the spring of 1966 to the 1976 having 231 match and 36 goals for the A PFG. He is champion with CSKA Sofia (1966, 1969, 1971–1973, 1975, 1976), Four times winner of the Bulgarian Cup (1969, 1972–1974) With 18 match and 3 goals for CSKA Sofia in European Tournaments. Participated in the Champions League 1/2 Final (1967) and 1/4 Final (1974). He was coach of CSKA Sofia in three matches in the spring of 1995.",
"score": "1.5069466"
},
{
"id": "25435860",
"title": "Todor Atanasov",
"text": " Todor Atanasov (Тодор Атанасов; 31 March 1954 – 8 November 2020) was a Bulgarian footballer who played as an attacking midfielder. He spent the majority of his career with Cherno More Varna.",
"score": "1.5009177"
},
{
"id": "1281164",
"title": "Atanas Atanasov (footballer, born 1969)",
"text": " Atanas Atanasov - Orela (Bulgarian: Атанас Атанасов - Орела; born 16 March 1969) is a former Bulgarian footballer. In 2015, he and other Spartak Varna legends founded FC Spartak Varna. On 20 April 2017 he was announced as manager of Montana. He couldn't save the team from relegation as Montana was eliminated in the final relegation play-off by Septemvri Sofia. He left the club in June 2017, after his contract expired.",
"score": "1.4985514"
},
{
"id": "8034917",
"title": "Aleksandar Atanasijević",
"text": " He is a gold medalist of 2011 European Championship, and bronze medalist of the 2013 European Championship. He was a member of the national team at the Olympic Games London 2012. On 19 July 2015, the Serbian national team with him in squad reached the final of the 2015 World League, but lost to France (0–3), and eventually achieved a silver medal. Atanasijević received an individual award for the Best Opposite Spiker of the tournament.",
"score": "1.4961601"
},
{
"id": "6704072",
"title": "Vyacheslav",
"text": "Vyacheslav Atavin (born 1967), Soviet and Russian handball player who has won gold medals at European and World Championships and at the Olympic Games ; Vyacheslav Chukanov (born 1952), Olympic Gold Medalist in show jumping with the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Denisov (born 1983), Uzbek basketball player who is a member of the Uzbekistan national team and made his debut at the 2009 FIBA Asia Championships ; Vyacheslav Domani (born 1947), Russian Olympic volleyball player who won a bronze medal competing for the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Dryagin (born 1940), Russian Winter Olympic skier and World Championships bronze medalist who competed for the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Dubinin, runner up in the Individual Ice Racing World Championship in 1966 and 1967 ; Vyacheslav ",
"score": "1.4919378"
},
{
"id": "15158389",
"title": "Zhivko Atanasov",
"text": " Zhivko Atanasov (Живко Атанасов; born 3 February 1991) is a Bulgarian professional footballer who plays as a centre back for Cherno More Varna.",
"score": "1.4904561"
}
] | [
"Atanas Atanasov (basketball)\n Atanas Atanasov (Атанас Атанасов, 19 November 1935 – 3 September 2021) was a Bulgarian basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1956 Summer Olympics, and the 1960 Summer Olympics. Atanasov died on 3 September 2021, at the age of 85.",
"Martin Atanasov\n Martin Atanasov (Мартин Атанасов) (born 27 September 1996) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team. On club level, he plays for Ziraat Bankası Ankara.",
"Stanimir Atanasov\n Stanimir Atanasov (Станимир Атанасов) (born 20 April 1976 in Rousse) is a Bulgarian sprint canoer who has competed from 1995 to 2004. He won a bronze medal in the C-4 500 m event at the 1995 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Duisburg. Atanasov was a European bronze medallist in 1997 (C-2) and 2002 (C-1). At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, he earned his best finish of eighth in the C-1 500 m event.",
"Dimo Atanasov\n Atanasov also played for the Bulgaria national under-21 football team and scored 2 goals - one in a friendly game against Republic of Macedonia and one in a qualification against Ukraine.",
"Zlatozar Atanasov\n Zlatozar Atanasov (Bulgarian: Златозар Атанасов; born 12 December 1989) is a Bulgarian athlete specialising in the triple jump. He represented his country at the 2013 World Championships without qualifying for the final. In addition, he finished eleventh at the 2012 European Championships and seventh at the 2013 European Indoor Championships. His personal bests in the event are 17.09 metres outdoors (+1.3 m/s, Burgas 2013) and 16.70 metres indoors (Dobrich 2013).",
"Atanas Shopov\n He was born October 4, 1951, in Dobrovnitsa village near Pazardzhik. He won the silver medal in the 90 kg category at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the bronze at the 1976 Summer Olympics. He also won the bronze at the 1971 European Weightlifting Championships in Sofia, the silver at the 1972 European Championships, and the bronze at the 1973 European Championships. He began training in 1964. Until 1972 he competed for Benkovski Pazardzhik. Then until 1974 for CSKA Sofia, and then until 1976 again for Benkovski. He has set 15 world records for juniors.",
"Andrey Atanasov\n Andrey Atanasov (Андрей Атанасов; born 9 April 1987) is a Bulgarian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Dimitrovgrad. He previously played for Yantra Gabrovo, Volov Shumen, Chernomorets Pomorie, Lokomotiv Sofia, Banants Yerevan, Botev Vratsa, Lokomotiv Plovdiv and Calisia Kalisz.",
"Valentin Atanasov\n Valentin Atanasov (Валентин Атанасов, born 7 May 1961) in Kjustendil, Bulgaria is a retired Bulgarian sprinter who specialized in the 100 metres. He won three medals at the European Indoor Championships. His personal best time was 10.15 seconds, achieved in August 1982 in Sofia. This ranks him second among Bulgarian 100 metres sprinters, only behind Petar Petrov. He also competed in the bobsleigh at the 1992 Winter Olympics and the 1994 Winter Olympics.",
"Chavdar Atanasov\n Chavdar Atanasov (Чавдар Атанасов) (born 3 February 1973, in Vratsa) is a Bulgarian retired football attacking midfielder. On 4 November 1999, he netted a goal for Levski Sofia in the 1:1 away draw with Juventus in the second leg of second round UEFA Cup match, with the \"bluemen\" being eliminated after a 2:4 aggregate score.",
"Atanas Nikolovski\n Atanas Nikolovski (born 22 June 1980 in Skopje) is a Macedonian slalom canoer who has competed since the mid-1990s. In 2009, Atanas achieved 14th place in the world ranking race in Sydney, Australia. He came 1st in the semi finals, and 7th in the finals of the 2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships. At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, he was the flag-bearer for his nation during the opening ceremonies of those games. In the K-1 event, Nikolovski was eliminated in the qualifying round, finishing in 19th place. Atanas is sponsored by Herbalife.",
"Sos Hayrapetyan\n Hayrapetyan first trained in football and took up field hockey only in 1976. Within a few years, he had grown into one of the leading Soviet players. He started his club career in 1978 with SKA Sverdlovsk. In 1978 and 1979, he placed second at the Soviet championships, and in 1980 won the title. From 1981 to 1987, he played for Dynamo Alma-Ata and from 1988 to 1992 for Hrazdan. From 1978 to 1991, Hayrapetyan was part of the Soviet national team. He won an Olympic bronze medal in 1980, the Intercontinental Cup in 1981, and a silver medal at the 1983 European Championships, losing the final in the penalty shootout. ",
"Zhivko Atanasov\n Atanasov's mother, Yordanka Donkova, is a former hurdling athlete notable for winning an Olympic gold medal and bronze medal as well as 9 medals at European indoor and outdoor championships.",
"Atanas Gerov\n Atanas Gerov (Атанас Геров) (born 1945) is a Bulgarian footballer. He was born in Kyustendil. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, where he won a silver medal with the Bulgarian team.",
"Atanasov\nAndrey Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, 1987 ; Atanas Atanasov, runner, born 1945 ; Atanas Atanasov, Bulgarian long jumper, born 1956 ; Atanas Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1985 ; Chavdar Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1973 ; Dimo Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1985 ; Dmitar Atanasov, Bulgarian sprint canoer ; Doncho Atanasov, Bulgarian footballer, born 1983 ; Gavril Atanasov, 19th century Yugoslavian icon painter ; Georgi Atanasov (composer), Bulgarian composer, 1882 – 1931 ; Georgi Atanasov (politician), Bulgarian politician and Prime Minister from 1986 - 1990 ; Hristo Atanassov (born 1965), Bulgarian politician ; Hristo Atanasov (Dikanya), Bulgarian revolutionary, 1877 - 1908 ; John Vincent Atanasoff, American physicist and one of the inventors of the computer, 1903 - 1995. ; Kosta Atanasov, a Bulgarian teacher and revolutionary, 1870 - 1912 ; Krassimir ",
"Tsvetan Atanasov\n Tsvetan Atanasov (Цветан Атанасов) (born 10 April 1948) was a Bulgarian football player who was deployed as a central midfield. He played for CSKA Sofia form the spring of 1966 to the 1976 having 231 match and 36 goals for the A PFG. He is champion with CSKA Sofia (1966, 1969, 1971–1973, 1975, 1976), Four times winner of the Bulgarian Cup (1969, 1972–1974) With 18 match and 3 goals for CSKA Sofia in European Tournaments. Participated in the Champions League 1/2 Final (1967) and 1/4 Final (1974). He was coach of CSKA Sofia in three matches in the spring of 1995.",
"Todor Atanasov\n Todor Atanasov (Тодор Атанасов; 31 March 1954 – 8 November 2020) was a Bulgarian footballer who played as an attacking midfielder. He spent the majority of his career with Cherno More Varna.",
"Atanas Atanasov (footballer, born 1969)\n Atanas Atanasov - Orela (Bulgarian: Атанас Атанасов - Орела; born 16 March 1969) is a former Bulgarian footballer. In 2015, he and other Spartak Varna legends founded FC Spartak Varna. On 20 April 2017 he was announced as manager of Montana. He couldn't save the team from relegation as Montana was eliminated in the final relegation play-off by Septemvri Sofia. He left the club in June 2017, after his contract expired.",
"Aleksandar Atanasijević\n He is a gold medalist of 2011 European Championship, and bronze medalist of the 2013 European Championship. He was a member of the national team at the Olympic Games London 2012. On 19 July 2015, the Serbian national team with him in squad reached the final of the 2015 World League, but lost to France (0–3), and eventually achieved a silver medal. Atanasijević received an individual award for the Best Opposite Spiker of the tournament.",
"Vyacheslav\nVyacheslav Atavin (born 1967), Soviet and Russian handball player who has won gold medals at European and World Championships and at the Olympic Games ; Vyacheslav Chukanov (born 1952), Olympic Gold Medalist in show jumping with the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Denisov (born 1983), Uzbek basketball player who is a member of the Uzbekistan national team and made his debut at the 2009 FIBA Asia Championships ; Vyacheslav Domani (born 1947), Russian Olympic volleyball player who won a bronze medal competing for the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Dryagin (born 1940), Russian Winter Olympic skier and World Championships bronze medalist who competed for the Soviet Union ; Vyacheslav Dubinin, runner up in the Individual Ice Racing World Championship in 1966 and 1967 ; Vyacheslav ",
"Zhivko Atanasov\n Zhivko Atanasov (Живко Атанасов; born 3 February 1991) is a Bulgarian professional footballer who plays as a centre back for Cherno More Varna."
] |
What sport does Abdoul Thiam play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Abdoul Thiam | 3,208,195 | 58 | [
{
"id": "31908154",
"title": "Abdoul Thiam",
"text": " Abdoul Thiam (born 19 June 1976 in Berlin) is a German footballer who currently plays for Hilalspor Berlin in the 7th tier Landesliga Berlin Staffel 1. At the height of his career, Thiam played 73 games for Eintracht Braunschweig and Rot Weiss Ahlen in the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga.",
"score": "1.9313321"
},
{
"id": "30290738",
"title": "Abdoulaye Thiam",
"text": " Abdoulaye Thiam (born January 1, 1984) is a Senegalese sabre fencer. Thiam represented Senegal at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed in the men's individual sabre event, along with his teammate Mamadou Keita. He lost the first preliminary round match to U.S. fencer Jason Rogers, with a score of 10–15.",
"score": "1.8469477"
},
{
"id": "13963907",
"title": "Djibril Thiam",
"text": " Djibril Thiam (born July 6, 1986) is a Senegalese basketball player for Al-Fateh and the Senegalese national team, where he participated at the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.",
"score": "1.793577"
},
{
"id": "3803680",
"title": "Abdou Mbacke Thiam",
"text": " Abdou Mbacke Thiam (born 3 February 1992) is a Senegalese footballer who plays as a forward.",
"score": "1.7153065"
},
{
"id": "3660526",
"title": "Serigne Abdou Thiam",
"text": " Serigne Abdou (28 February 1995 – 27 September 2016) was a Qatari footballer of Senegalese descent who played for Al Khor as a defender. He also played for the Qatar youth team.",
"score": "1.6547731"
},
{
"id": "6692929",
"title": "Thiam",
"text": "Abdou Mbacke Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in the United States ; Abdoul Thiam (born 1976), German footballer ; Abdoulaye Thiam (born 1984), Senegalese sabre fencer ; Abdoulkader Thiam (born 1998), Mauritanian footballer in France ; Amy Mbacké Thiam (born 1976), Senegalese sprinter ; Assane Thiam (born 1948), Senegalese basketball player ; Brahim Thiam (born 1974), French and Malian footballer ; Demba Thiam (born 1998), Senegalese footballer in Italy ; Djibril Thiam (born 1986), Senegalese basketball player ; Ibrahima Thiam (born 1981), Senegalese footballer in Belgium ; Khaly Thiam (born 1994), Senegalese footballer in Bulgaria ; Mame Baba Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in Turkey ; Mamadou Thiam (born 1995), Senegalese footballer in England ; Mamadou Touré Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in Israel ; Mohamed Thiam (born 1996), Guinean footballer ; Nafissatou Thiam (born 1994), Belgian athlete ; Oumoul Thiam (born 1990), Senegalese basketball player ; Pablo Thiam (born 1974), Guinean footballer ; Serigne Abdou Thiam (1995–2016), Qatari footballer of Senegalese descent ",
"score": "1.6508509"
},
{
"id": "24968883",
"title": "Ibrahima Thiam",
"text": " He left Drogheda for Europe, playing with Paris SG and RC Lens, then Roeselare in Belgium.",
"score": "1.6361876"
},
{
"id": "26369253",
"title": "Abderrahim Zhiou",
"text": " Abderrahim born on 26 September 1985 in Gabes. He started the sport in 1996 aged 11, but his visual impairment was an obstacle in front of his goal to be a professional basketball player. Two years later, he joined the Tunisian Federation of Sports for the Disabled team based at Gabes. The international debut of Abderrahim was in an international tournament in Morocco, in 2002.",
"score": "1.6286523"
},
{
"id": "3660527",
"title": "Serigne Abdou Thiam",
"text": " Abdou graduated from Aspire Academy in 2013. He made his league debut with Al Khor 19 November 2012 against Al Gharafa at the age of 17.",
"score": "1.6240618"
},
{
"id": "27581742",
"title": "Idrissa Thiam",
"text": " Idrissa Thiam (born 2 September 2000) is a Mauritanian professional footballer who plays as a right winger for Spanish club SCR Peña Deportiva.",
"score": "1.6182513"
},
{
"id": "8673048",
"title": "Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)",
"text": " Demba Thiam (born 2 December 1989) is a French footballer who plays as a leftback for Dunkerque.",
"score": "1.6000221"
},
{
"id": "32072723",
"title": "Nafissatou Thiam",
"text": " her second gold medal at the Olympic Games with a total of 6791 points. Thiam is a member of RFCL Athlétisme, an athletics club operating under the aegis of the Technical and Sports Department of the Royal Football Club de Liège, and is coached by Belgian former decathlete Roger Lespagnard. Besides being a professional athlete, Thiam studies geography at the University of Liège. \"I like climatology, I like geomorphology – how the earth is shaped by rivers. A lot of subjects, like a heptathlon. Maybe that's why I love it.\" she says. Thiam is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassdor for UNICEF Belgium.",
"score": "1.5939507"
},
{
"id": "24968879",
"title": "Ibrahima Thiam",
"text": " Ibrahima Thiam (born 20 August 1981 in Guédiawaye) is a Senegalese retired footballer. He considers himself to be a target man.",
"score": "1.5825214"
},
{
"id": "9168532",
"title": "Khaly Thiam",
"text": " Khaly Thiam (born 7 January 1994) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Turkish club Altay.",
"score": "1.5777586"
},
{
"id": "8673050",
"title": "Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)",
"text": " Born in France, Thiam is of Senegalese descent.",
"score": "1.5753013"
},
{
"id": "27581744",
"title": "Idrissa Thiam",
"text": " In October 2020, Thiam was called up by Mauritania national team manager Corentin Martins for two friendly matches against Sierra Leone and Senegal. He made his full international debut on 9 October, coming on as a second-half substitute for Almike N'Diaye and providing the assist for Hemeya Tanjy's winning goal in a 2–1 victory over the former.",
"score": "1.5706732"
},
{
"id": "7769596",
"title": "Oumoul Thiam",
"text": " Oumoul Khairy Thiam (born 3 February 1990) is a Senegalese basketball player. She represented Senegal in the basketball competition at the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5544491"
},
{
"id": "12733070",
"title": "Jimmy Abdou",
"text": " Nadjim Abdou (born 13 July 1984) is a professional footballer. He previously played for Martigues, Sedan, Plymouth Argyle, Millwall and AFC Wimbledon. He has represented Comoros at international level.",
"score": "1.5516768"
},
{
"id": "8673049",
"title": "Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)",
"text": " Thiam made his professional debut with Dunkerque in a 1-0 Ligue 2 win over Toulouse FC on 22 August 2020.",
"score": "1.5453548"
},
{
"id": "2623162",
"title": "Mamadou Thiam",
"text": " Mamadou Thiam (born 20 March 1995) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays as a forward for Nancy. He is also a former Senegal U20s international.",
"score": "1.5427518"
}
] | [
"Abdoul Thiam\n Abdoul Thiam (born 19 June 1976 in Berlin) is a German footballer who currently plays for Hilalspor Berlin in the 7th tier Landesliga Berlin Staffel 1. At the height of his career, Thiam played 73 games for Eintracht Braunschweig and Rot Weiss Ahlen in the 2. Fußball-Bundesliga.",
"Abdoulaye Thiam\n Abdoulaye Thiam (born January 1, 1984) is a Senegalese sabre fencer. Thiam represented Senegal at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed in the men's individual sabre event, along with his teammate Mamadou Keita. He lost the first preliminary round match to U.S. fencer Jason Rogers, with a score of 10–15.",
"Djibril Thiam\n Djibril Thiam (born July 6, 1986) is a Senegalese basketball player for Al-Fateh and the Senegalese national team, where he participated at the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.",
"Abdou Mbacke Thiam\n Abdou Mbacke Thiam (born 3 February 1992) is a Senegalese footballer who plays as a forward.",
"Serigne Abdou Thiam\n Serigne Abdou (28 February 1995 – 27 September 2016) was a Qatari footballer of Senegalese descent who played for Al Khor as a defender. He also played for the Qatar youth team.",
"Thiam\nAbdou Mbacke Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in the United States ; Abdoul Thiam (born 1976), German footballer ; Abdoulaye Thiam (born 1984), Senegalese sabre fencer ; Abdoulkader Thiam (born 1998), Mauritanian footballer in France ; Amy Mbacké Thiam (born 1976), Senegalese sprinter ; Assane Thiam (born 1948), Senegalese basketball player ; Brahim Thiam (born 1974), French and Malian footballer ; Demba Thiam (born 1998), Senegalese footballer in Italy ; Djibril Thiam (born 1986), Senegalese basketball player ; Ibrahima Thiam (born 1981), Senegalese footballer in Belgium ; Khaly Thiam (born 1994), Senegalese footballer in Bulgaria ; Mame Baba Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in Turkey ; Mamadou Thiam (born 1995), Senegalese footballer in England ; Mamadou Touré Thiam (born 1992), Senegalese footballer in Israel ; Mohamed Thiam (born 1996), Guinean footballer ; Nafissatou Thiam (born 1994), Belgian athlete ; Oumoul Thiam (born 1990), Senegalese basketball player ; Pablo Thiam (born 1974), Guinean footballer ; Serigne Abdou Thiam (1995–2016), Qatari footballer of Senegalese descent ",
"Ibrahima Thiam\n He left Drogheda for Europe, playing with Paris SG and RC Lens, then Roeselare in Belgium.",
"Abderrahim Zhiou\n Abderrahim born on 26 September 1985 in Gabes. He started the sport in 1996 aged 11, but his visual impairment was an obstacle in front of his goal to be a professional basketball player. Two years later, he joined the Tunisian Federation of Sports for the Disabled team based at Gabes. The international debut of Abderrahim was in an international tournament in Morocco, in 2002.",
"Serigne Abdou Thiam\n Abdou graduated from Aspire Academy in 2013. He made his league debut with Al Khor 19 November 2012 against Al Gharafa at the age of 17.",
"Idrissa Thiam\n Idrissa Thiam (born 2 September 2000) is a Mauritanian professional footballer who plays as a right winger for Spanish club SCR Peña Deportiva.",
"Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)\n Demba Thiam (born 2 December 1989) is a French footballer who plays as a leftback for Dunkerque.",
"Nafissatou Thiam\n her second gold medal at the Olympic Games with a total of 6791 points. Thiam is a member of RFCL Athlétisme, an athletics club operating under the aegis of the Technical and Sports Department of the Royal Football Club de Liège, and is coached by Belgian former decathlete Roger Lespagnard. Besides being a professional athlete, Thiam studies geography at the University of Liège. \"I like climatology, I like geomorphology – how the earth is shaped by rivers. A lot of subjects, like a heptathlon. Maybe that's why I love it.\" she says. Thiam is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassdor for UNICEF Belgium.",
"Ibrahima Thiam\n Ibrahima Thiam (born 20 August 1981 in Guédiawaye) is a Senegalese retired footballer. He considers himself to be a target man.",
"Khaly Thiam\n Khaly Thiam (born 7 January 1994) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Turkish club Altay.",
"Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)\n Born in France, Thiam is of Senegalese descent.",
"Idrissa Thiam\n In October 2020, Thiam was called up by Mauritania national team manager Corentin Martins for two friendly matches against Sierra Leone and Senegal. He made his full international debut on 9 October, coming on as a second-half substitute for Almike N'Diaye and providing the assist for Hemeya Tanjy's winning goal in a 2–1 victory over the former.",
"Oumoul Thiam\n Oumoul Khairy Thiam (born 3 February 1990) is a Senegalese basketball player. She represented Senegal in the basketball competition at the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"Jimmy Abdou\n Nadjim Abdou (born 13 July 1984) is a professional footballer. He previously played for Martigues, Sedan, Plymouth Argyle, Millwall and AFC Wimbledon. He has represented Comoros at international level.",
"Demba Thiam (footballer, born 1989)\n Thiam made his professional debut with Dunkerque in a 1-0 Ligue 2 win over Toulouse FC on 22 August 2020.",
"Mamadou Thiam\n Mamadou Thiam (born 20 March 1995) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays as a forward for Nancy. He is also a former Senegal U20s international."
] |
What sport does Lobos BUAP Premier play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Lobos BUAP Premier | 4,534,022 | 74 | [
{
"id": "26467281",
"title": "Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla",
"text": " The sport teams of the university are named the Lobos (Wolves) BUAP. There are several sport facilities through the state for the students to take part in. The BUAP takes part in different competitions with representative teams in them. The Lobos de la BUAP soccer team is currently affiliated with the university, and features some students from Puebla's public university. They currently play in the Liga de Balompié Mexicano.",
"score": "1.6455688"
},
{
"id": "31640502",
"title": "Lobos BUAP Premier",
"text": " Club de Fútbol Lobos de la Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla Premier were a Mexican football club based in Puebla, Mexico. The club represented the Autonomous University of Puebla. The clubs was affiliated with Lobos BUAP and plays in the Liga Premier.",
"score": "1.6153841"
},
{
"id": "28127856",
"title": "Estadio Universitario BUAP",
"text": " The first stage of the stadium opened in 1999 and was used by Lobos de la BUAP, a professional football club that plays in the Ascenso MX. In 2007, the club moved because it did not meet the requirements of the Mexican Football Federation for an Ascenso MX home grounds; namely, it required expansion from 9,000 to at least 15,000 seats. After three and a half years in the Estadio Cuauhtémoc, Lobos returned to the Estadio Universitario on February 26, 2012 after it was expanded to hold more than 20,000. In 2017, Lobos were promoted to Liga MX, and as the venue seats more than the 20,000 minimum for a first-division football ",
"score": "1.5118283"
},
{
"id": "4848045",
"title": "University of New Mexico",
"text": " UNM's NCAA Division I program (FBS for football) offers 18 varsity sports. The teams are known as the Lobos, who compete in the Mountain West Conference. Two human mascots, referred to as Louie Lobo and Lucy Lobo, rouse crowds at New Mexico athletic events. The official school colors are cherry and silver. The Lobos have won national championships in skiing and cross country running.",
"score": "1.4364539"
},
{
"id": "24995508",
"title": "Lobos Zacatepec",
"text": " On June 26, 2020, the end of professional football was announced in Zacatepec, after the departure of Atlético Zacatepec to Morelia, where it was renamed Atlético Morelia. Meanwhile, Guillermo Aguilar had started the procedures to return Lobos BUAP to football, but taking part of the Liga de Balompié Mexicano instead of Mexican Football Federation, on June 27 the club's entry into the new league became official, The team signed Rodrigo Ruiz as its technical director and announced the arrival of its first players, some of them involved in the previous Lobos BUAP stage that included their promotion to Liga MX. In August 2020, the Lobos BUAP return was ",
"score": "1.4227107"
},
{
"id": "28127855",
"title": "Estadio Universitario BUAP",
"text": " Estadio Universitario BUAP (official name) is a multi-purpose stadium located in Ciudad Universitaria in Puebla, Puebla, Mexico. It is used by the Lobos BUAP professional football team, currently playing in the Liga MX top flight of Mexican football.",
"score": "1.4154427"
},
{
"id": "938698",
"title": "2020 LFA season",
"text": "Artilleros, previously playing at Estadio Templo del Dolor (with capacity of 4,500 spectators), moved to the Estadio Universitario BUAP, that can accommodate 19,283 spectators. The stadium, originally built from 1997 to 1999, was renovated in 2012 and used to host Lobos BUAP, Liga MX matches until 2019, when the club was dissolved. ; Fundidores moved to Estadio Borregos, with a capacity of 10,057 spectators. The stadium is owned by the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education and it is used by college football team Borregos Salvajes Monterrey. Before, Fundidores played at the Estadio Nuevo León Unido, that could only accommodate 1,500 people. ; Mexicas, formerly playing at Casco de Santo Tomás Field (with capacity of 2,000 spectators), moved to ",
"score": "1.408489"
},
{
"id": "4848049",
"title": "University of New Mexico",
"text": " The Lobo football team plays at University Stadium which is located across the street from The Pit. The team has been to six bowl games since 1997 after a 35-year bowl drought. Placekicker Katie Hnida made history in the 2003 Las Vegas Bowl when she became the first woman to play in an NCAA Division I-A game, attempting but missing an extra point in the Lobos's 27–13 loss to UCLA. She later attempted and made two extra points in UNM's 72–8 victory over Texas State. New Mexico also lost its 2003 and 2004 bowl games, making its record in bowl games 2–8–1. The football team went to the first year of the New Mexico Bowl in 2006 and lost to San Jose State University 20–12. In 2007 the Lobos finished the regular season 8–4 and were invited to the New Mexico Bowl for the second straight season. The Lobos shut out the favored Nevada Wolf Pack 23–0 to win their first bowl game since the 1961 Aviation Bowl.",
"score": "1.4073079"
},
{
"id": "31640352",
"title": "New Mexico Lobos baseball",
"text": " New Mexico Lobos baseball is a college baseball program of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The first team was fielded in 1899 and posted a 1,708–1,537–14 (.526) record through the 2014 season. The Lobos have won three conference tournaments, finished first in regular season conference play eight times, and appeared in the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship 5 times. The team plays their home games on the University of New Mexico campus at Santa Ana Star Field. Tod Brown has been the head coach of the Lobos since the 2022 season.",
"score": "1.3966271"
},
{
"id": "7198974",
"title": "Lobo Bravo Rugby",
"text": " Currently Lobo Bravo Rugby hold their training every Saturday at the Quarter of the 26th Artillery Group of the Campaign. During the week, the drills are conducted in Lake Park.",
"score": "1.3930175"
},
{
"id": "14888167",
"title": "New Mexico Lobos men's basketball",
"text": " games due to disciplinary problems. Alford applied a strict regimen and Giddens responded with a standout senior season, leading the team with 16 points and nine rebounds a game. Six other players averaged between seven and ten points as balanced scoring became a hallmark of Lobo squads under Alford. The Lobos began the 2007–08 season 14–2 before losing four of six in league; they then won eight of nine to close out the regular season. They lost in the conference tournament but received a bid to the NIT, losing at Cal to finish 24–9, the most wins for a first-year Lobo coach to ",
"score": "1.3926024"
},
{
"id": "4561463",
"title": "César Cercado",
"text": " At the age of 14, he joined the Lobos de la BUAP club, which represents the Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla in the Promotion League. He has played there between 2006 and 2019. and then in 2011 transferred to Puebla F.C. on a 6-month loan deal. In 2019, Lobos BUAP was acquired by F.C. Juárez, after this, Cercado signed for Alebrijes de Oaxaca.",
"score": "1.3807099"
},
{
"id": "11897957",
"title": "Lobos Athletic Club",
"text": " Lobos Athletic Club is an Argentine sports club based in the city of Lobos, Buenos Aires. Although other sports were practised at the club, Lobos Athletic is mostly known for its football team, who took part in the Primera División championships until its disaffection, being runner-up in 1898 and 1899. Nowadays Lobos AC plays in \"Liga Lobense de Fútbol\", a regional league of Buenos Aires Province. Apart from football, other sports sections of the club are field hockey, basketball and volleyball.",
"score": "1.3786304"
},
{
"id": "11897959",
"title": "Lobos Athletic Club",
"text": " will surrender\" In the first meeting, on Sunday 3 July 1892, Lobos Athletic was founded. According with club's founding act, the purpose of creating a club was \"To serve as an entertainment for the youth of Lobos, living in a town which life is monotonous and boring. This entertainment would be possible through football, which will be practised following the Association rules\" Lobos Athletic was the first club to host the practise of football in Buenos Aires Province, some of these footballing techniques was being taught later in the early 1900s by an Irish immigrant [Patrick (Paddy) McCarthy] who arrived in Buenos Aires in 1900 at the age of 29 to teach English and ",
"score": "1.3715975"
},
{
"id": "14402420",
"title": "2010 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team",
"text": " The Lobos first touchdown of the game came on the next drive with a B.R. Holbrook touchdown pass to Lucas Reed. James Aho kicked the extra point for the Lobos and brought the score to 24–10. The Red Raiders answered the Lobos' touchdown with one of their own on their next possession. This touchdown came way by a 25-yard Taylor Potts pass to Lyle Leong with a Matt Williams extra point for a score of 31–10. The Lobos scored the final score of the half after Chris Hernandez recovered his own team's fumble for a touchdown. James Aho kicked the ",
"score": "1.371554"
},
{
"id": "2704406",
"title": "Lucas Lobos",
"text": " On September 19, 2013 coach Víctor Manuel Vucetich called up Lobos for the Mexico national football team after Lucas became a naturalized Mexican citizen, but did not play any of the two games.",
"score": "1.3701174"
},
{
"id": "11897960",
"title": "Lobos Athletic Club",
"text": " at the Commerce School. Edmundo Kirk was elected as its first president, while Tomás Moore was the first captain for the club. Other persons that took part in club's foundation were Carlos Page, Patricio Kirk, Tomás Mackeon, Tomás Garraham, Santiago Mackeon, Eugenio Seery, Juan Geoghehan, José Garrahan, Lorenzo Owens, Felix Dolan, Hugo Lawlor, Eduardo Walsh, William Weir, José Joyce, Eusebio Eguino, Eduardo Slamon and Eduardo Burbridge Jr. Those young people studied at the English High School of Buenos Aires (where legendary team Alumni was founded) and because of their contacts with other students, Lobos AC played some matches facing Once de Carlos Bowers, Ferrocarril Sud, Quilmes, St. Andrew's and English High School, all of ",
"score": "1.3699982"
},
{
"id": "9679876",
"title": "C.D. Once Lobos",
"text": " Once Lobos was founded in 1918, in Chalchuapa. Their first match that year – long before the country had a football league or even a football federation – was against Fuerte 22, a club from nearby Santa Ana. The Club came about after the fusion of clubs Esparta and Germania. They played their first international match that same year, travelling about 60 km north to face a team in Jutiapa, Guatemala. Once Lobos played their first official match against UCA in 1923. For many decades, the team played its home games at Estadio el Progreso, a pitch within earshot of the ancient Tazumal pyramid and its ballcourt from Pre-Columbian times. ",
"score": "1.3692896"
},
{
"id": "32083883",
"title": "Sport in the Dominican Republic",
"text": " Luis Castillo, defensive end played in the National Football League for the San Diego Chargers. Castillo was the cover athlete for the Spanish language version of Madden NFL 08. Rugby union is a minor sport, but there is a Dominican Republic side, which has played at least one international. Other sports include combat sports of judo, and professional wrestlers Arcadio Brito, Jack Veneno and Bronco # 1. In 2014, Victor Estrella became the nation's first top 100 tennis player.",
"score": "1.3623905"
},
{
"id": "25692511",
"title": "Pico Truncado",
"text": " For more than 30 years, basketball has been one of the most popular sports. Proof of this was La Garra Celeste. This was the nickname of the basketball team that played in the national B tournament. After several years and transitions it became the Club Escuela de Básquet de Pico Truncado, La Escuelita. The city has two teams affiliated to the Federal Council called Defensores de Truncado and 13 de Diciembre, which plays in the Santa Cruz North Soccer League at the Caleta Olivia venue. It also has the Neighborhood League where teams made up of local citizens compete. A predominant natural characteristic in the town is the wind, this resource is used for kitebuggy sports.",
"score": "1.3593905"
}
] | [
"Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla\n The sport teams of the university are named the Lobos (Wolves) BUAP. There are several sport facilities through the state for the students to take part in. The BUAP takes part in different competitions with representative teams in them. The Lobos de la BUAP soccer team is currently affiliated with the university, and features some students from Puebla's public university. They currently play in the Liga de Balompié Mexicano.",
"Lobos BUAP Premier\n Club de Fútbol Lobos de la Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla Premier were a Mexican football club based in Puebla, Mexico. The club represented the Autonomous University of Puebla. The clubs was affiliated with Lobos BUAP and plays in the Liga Premier.",
"Estadio Universitario BUAP\n The first stage of the stadium opened in 1999 and was used by Lobos de la BUAP, a professional football club that plays in the Ascenso MX. In 2007, the club moved because it did not meet the requirements of the Mexican Football Federation for an Ascenso MX home grounds; namely, it required expansion from 9,000 to at least 15,000 seats. After three and a half years in the Estadio Cuauhtémoc, Lobos returned to the Estadio Universitario on February 26, 2012 after it was expanded to hold more than 20,000. In 2017, Lobos were promoted to Liga MX, and as the venue seats more than the 20,000 minimum for a first-division football ",
"University of New Mexico\n UNM's NCAA Division I program (FBS for football) offers 18 varsity sports. The teams are known as the Lobos, who compete in the Mountain West Conference. Two human mascots, referred to as Louie Lobo and Lucy Lobo, rouse crowds at New Mexico athletic events. The official school colors are cherry and silver. The Lobos have won national championships in skiing and cross country running.",
"Lobos Zacatepec\n On June 26, 2020, the end of professional football was announced in Zacatepec, after the departure of Atlético Zacatepec to Morelia, where it was renamed Atlético Morelia. Meanwhile, Guillermo Aguilar had started the procedures to return Lobos BUAP to football, but taking part of the Liga de Balompié Mexicano instead of Mexican Football Federation, on June 27 the club's entry into the new league became official, The team signed Rodrigo Ruiz as its technical director and announced the arrival of its first players, some of them involved in the previous Lobos BUAP stage that included their promotion to Liga MX. In August 2020, the Lobos BUAP return was ",
"Estadio Universitario BUAP\n Estadio Universitario BUAP (official name) is a multi-purpose stadium located in Ciudad Universitaria in Puebla, Puebla, Mexico. It is used by the Lobos BUAP professional football team, currently playing in the Liga MX top flight of Mexican football.",
"2020 LFA season\nArtilleros, previously playing at Estadio Templo del Dolor (with capacity of 4,500 spectators), moved to the Estadio Universitario BUAP, that can accommodate 19,283 spectators. The stadium, originally built from 1997 to 1999, was renovated in 2012 and used to host Lobos BUAP, Liga MX matches until 2019, when the club was dissolved. ; Fundidores moved to Estadio Borregos, with a capacity of 10,057 spectators. The stadium is owned by the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education and it is used by college football team Borregos Salvajes Monterrey. Before, Fundidores played at the Estadio Nuevo León Unido, that could only accommodate 1,500 people. ; Mexicas, formerly playing at Casco de Santo Tomás Field (with capacity of 2,000 spectators), moved to ",
"University of New Mexico\n The Lobo football team plays at University Stadium which is located across the street from The Pit. The team has been to six bowl games since 1997 after a 35-year bowl drought. Placekicker Katie Hnida made history in the 2003 Las Vegas Bowl when she became the first woman to play in an NCAA Division I-A game, attempting but missing an extra point in the Lobos's 27–13 loss to UCLA. She later attempted and made two extra points in UNM's 72–8 victory over Texas State. New Mexico also lost its 2003 and 2004 bowl games, making its record in bowl games 2–8–1. The football team went to the first year of the New Mexico Bowl in 2006 and lost to San Jose State University 20–12. In 2007 the Lobos finished the regular season 8–4 and were invited to the New Mexico Bowl for the second straight season. The Lobos shut out the favored Nevada Wolf Pack 23–0 to win their first bowl game since the 1961 Aviation Bowl.",
"New Mexico Lobos baseball\n New Mexico Lobos baseball is a college baseball program of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The first team was fielded in 1899 and posted a 1,708–1,537–14 (.526) record through the 2014 season. The Lobos have won three conference tournaments, finished first in regular season conference play eight times, and appeared in the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship 5 times. The team plays their home games on the University of New Mexico campus at Santa Ana Star Field. Tod Brown has been the head coach of the Lobos since the 2022 season.",
"Lobo Bravo Rugby\n Currently Lobo Bravo Rugby hold their training every Saturday at the Quarter of the 26th Artillery Group of the Campaign. During the week, the drills are conducted in Lake Park.",
"New Mexico Lobos men's basketball\n games due to disciplinary problems. Alford applied a strict regimen and Giddens responded with a standout senior season, leading the team with 16 points and nine rebounds a game. Six other players averaged between seven and ten points as balanced scoring became a hallmark of Lobo squads under Alford. The Lobos began the 2007–08 season 14–2 before losing four of six in league; they then won eight of nine to close out the regular season. They lost in the conference tournament but received a bid to the NIT, losing at Cal to finish 24–9, the most wins for a first-year Lobo coach to ",
"César Cercado\n At the age of 14, he joined the Lobos de la BUAP club, which represents the Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla in the Promotion League. He has played there between 2006 and 2019. and then in 2011 transferred to Puebla F.C. on a 6-month loan deal. In 2019, Lobos BUAP was acquired by F.C. Juárez, after this, Cercado signed for Alebrijes de Oaxaca.",
"Lobos Athletic Club\n Lobos Athletic Club is an Argentine sports club based in the city of Lobos, Buenos Aires. Although other sports were practised at the club, Lobos Athletic is mostly known for its football team, who took part in the Primera División championships until its disaffection, being runner-up in 1898 and 1899. Nowadays Lobos AC plays in \"Liga Lobense de Fútbol\", a regional league of Buenos Aires Province. Apart from football, other sports sections of the club are field hockey, basketball and volleyball.",
"Lobos Athletic Club\n will surrender\" In the first meeting, on Sunday 3 July 1892, Lobos Athletic was founded. According with club's founding act, the purpose of creating a club was \"To serve as an entertainment for the youth of Lobos, living in a town which life is monotonous and boring. This entertainment would be possible through football, which will be practised following the Association rules\" Lobos Athletic was the first club to host the practise of football in Buenos Aires Province, some of these footballing techniques was being taught later in the early 1900s by an Irish immigrant [Patrick (Paddy) McCarthy] who arrived in Buenos Aires in 1900 at the age of 29 to teach English and ",
"2010 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team\n The Lobos first touchdown of the game came on the next drive with a B.R. Holbrook touchdown pass to Lucas Reed. James Aho kicked the extra point for the Lobos and brought the score to 24–10. The Red Raiders answered the Lobos' touchdown with one of their own on their next possession. This touchdown came way by a 25-yard Taylor Potts pass to Lyle Leong with a Matt Williams extra point for a score of 31–10. The Lobos scored the final score of the half after Chris Hernandez recovered his own team's fumble for a touchdown. James Aho kicked the ",
"Lucas Lobos\n On September 19, 2013 coach Víctor Manuel Vucetich called up Lobos for the Mexico national football team after Lucas became a naturalized Mexican citizen, but did not play any of the two games.",
"Lobos Athletic Club\n at the Commerce School. Edmundo Kirk was elected as its first president, while Tomás Moore was the first captain for the club. Other persons that took part in club's foundation were Carlos Page, Patricio Kirk, Tomás Mackeon, Tomás Garraham, Santiago Mackeon, Eugenio Seery, Juan Geoghehan, José Garrahan, Lorenzo Owens, Felix Dolan, Hugo Lawlor, Eduardo Walsh, William Weir, José Joyce, Eusebio Eguino, Eduardo Slamon and Eduardo Burbridge Jr. Those young people studied at the English High School of Buenos Aires (where legendary team Alumni was founded) and because of their contacts with other students, Lobos AC played some matches facing Once de Carlos Bowers, Ferrocarril Sud, Quilmes, St. Andrew's and English High School, all of ",
"C.D. Once Lobos\n Once Lobos was founded in 1918, in Chalchuapa. Their first match that year – long before the country had a football league or even a football federation – was against Fuerte 22, a club from nearby Santa Ana. The Club came about after the fusion of clubs Esparta and Germania. They played their first international match that same year, travelling about 60 km north to face a team in Jutiapa, Guatemala. Once Lobos played their first official match against UCA in 1923. For many decades, the team played its home games at Estadio el Progreso, a pitch within earshot of the ancient Tazumal pyramid and its ballcourt from Pre-Columbian times. ",
"Sport in the Dominican Republic\n Luis Castillo, defensive end played in the National Football League for the San Diego Chargers. Castillo was the cover athlete for the Spanish language version of Madden NFL 08. Rugby union is a minor sport, but there is a Dominican Republic side, which has played at least one international. Other sports include combat sports of judo, and professional wrestlers Arcadio Brito, Jack Veneno and Bronco # 1. In 2014, Victor Estrella became the nation's first top 100 tennis player.",
"Pico Truncado\n For more than 30 years, basketball has been one of the most popular sports. Proof of this was La Garra Celeste. This was the nickname of the basketball team that played in the national B tournament. After several years and transitions it became the Club Escuela de Básquet de Pico Truncado, La Escuelita. The city has two teams affiliated to the Federal Council called Defensores de Truncado and 13 de Diciembre, which plays in the Santa Cruz North Soccer League at the Caleta Olivia venue. It also has the Neighborhood League where teams made up of local citizens compete. A predominant natural characteristic in the town is the wind, this resource is used for kitebuggy sports."
] |
What sport does Harry Clay play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Harry Clay | 4,339,770 | 54 | [
{
"id": "9749479",
"title": "Thomas Clay",
"text": " In 1923 Thomas had been a trialist for Leicestershire County Cricket Club and between 1926 and 1929 during his time at Spurs he took up cricket coaching at Public Schools including Highgate, St Paul's and Berkhamsted. He coached Dutch football side HVV Den Haag between 1937 and 1939. After retiring from football he subsequently ran a pub and sports outfitters in St Albans. He was working as a builders' labourer in Southend-on-Sea when he died in 1949, aged 56.",
"score": "1.5965905"
},
{
"id": "1031420",
"title": "Harry Batstone",
"text": " Harry \"Red\" Batstone (September 5, 1899 – March 10, 1972) was a Canadian football player who played three seasons in the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union for the Toronto Argonauts and six seasons in the intercollegiate union for Queen's University. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in the founding cohort in 1963, and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.",
"score": "1.5835186"
},
{
"id": "30136057",
"title": "Harry Gibson (field hockey)",
"text": " Harry Jay Gibson (born 25 March 1993) is an English field hockey player, who plays as a goalkeeper for Surbiton and the England and Great Britain national teams. He was educated at Millfield.",
"score": "1.5758076"
},
{
"id": "12257915",
"title": "Harry Cahill",
"text": " When playing for Coventry & North Warwickshire Hockey Club in the 1960s, Cahill trained with Coventry City F.C., then managed by Jimmy Hill. Hill allegedly offered Cahill professional terms as an association footballer. In 1974 he helped Coventry & North Warwickshire win the Midlands League. He also played for Tamworth and eventually finished his field hockey playing career with Worthing, helping them to win the 1981 Sussex Cup when aged over 50. He continued playing in veterans competitions into his late 50s and also served as Worthing club captain between 1986 and 1990. At club level he often chose to play outfield as an inside-right. While playing in England, Cahill also represented Warwickshire, Staffordshire and Buckinghamshire at inter-county level.",
"score": "1.5731176"
},
{
"id": "10489842",
"title": "Harry Vriend",
"text": " Henri \"Harry\" Gerard Vriend (born 20 May 1938) is a former water polo player from the Netherlands, who competed at the 1960 and 1964 Summer Olympics; in both games he finished in eighth position with the Dutch Men's Team. His brother Wim played alongside Harry at the 1964 games. On 4 October 1963, Vriend married the Dutch swimmer Lenie de Nijs. He subsequently became a water polo coach and served as the head coach of the men's national team. Vriend later worked for NOS Studio Sport, a Dutch TV program, as a commentator.",
"score": "1.5718662"
},
{
"id": "3636399",
"title": "Liz Clay",
"text": " Clay was a keen dancer when she was young. She became interested in athletics after watching her younger brother Harry compete, and joined Hornsby Little Athletics as an under-10. She made her junior international debut at the 2014 World Juniors in the 100m hurdles, but had to withdraw from the team when she broke her navicular bone weeks before the team departed. Clay then completed an exercise and sports science degree in Sydney and relocated to the Gold Coast to work with Australian hurdles coach, Sharon Hannan, who had guided Sally Pearson to Olympic gold in 2012.",
"score": "1.5558217"
},
{
"id": "9749477",
"title": "Thomas Clay",
"text": " Tommy Clay (19 November 1892 – 21 February 1949) was a professional footballer who played fullback for Leicester Fosse (the original name for Leicester City), Tottenham Hotspur and England during the 1910s and 1920s.",
"score": "1.5511262"
},
{
"id": "1214387",
"title": "Harry Rusan",
"text": " Harry Alfonso Rusan (April 1, 1910 – November 9, 1987) was an American basketball player for the Harlem Globetrotters and a Negro league baseball shortstop in the 1930s. A native of St. Louis, Missouri, Rusan attended Paul Quinn College. He played professional baseball for the Brooklyn Royal Giants in 1931, and his basketball career with the Harlem Globetrotters spanned from 1933 to 1942. Rusan died in Detroit, Michigan in 1987 at age 77.",
"score": "1.5383725"
},
{
"id": "7038915",
"title": "Harry Croft",
"text": " Henry T. \"Harry\" Croft (August 1, 1875 – December 11, 1933) was a professional baseball player from 1899 to 1901, playing for three Major League teams: the Chicago Orphans, the Philadelphia Phillies, and the Louisville Colonels.",
"score": "1.5375612"
},
{
"id": "14658246",
"title": "William Harry",
"text": " William Richard Harry (30 November 1877 – 21 February 1943) was an Australian rules footballer who played in one game for in 1906. The oldest of twelve children, Harry was recruited to Carlton by Jack Worrall and made his debut in Round 11, 1906, against at Princes Park. After his solitary game for Carlton, he returned to his family in Rutherglen. He continued to play for Rutherglen before retiring to become an umpire. Harry died in 1943 after drowning in the Murray River attempting to retrieve a duck he had just shot.",
"score": "1.5310984"
},
{
"id": "30136058",
"title": "Harry Gibson (field hockey)",
"text": " Gibson plays club hockey in the Men's England Hockey League Premier Division for Surbiton. He previously played for Loughborough Students and Hampstead & Westminster.",
"score": "1.5300648"
},
{
"id": "25573276",
"title": "Harry Brown (basketball)",
"text": " Harry Truman Brown (October 22, 1948 January 10, 2021) was an American basketball player and educator who promoted the game of basketball in the Toronto area.",
"score": "1.5287395"
},
{
"id": "25661713",
"title": "Harry Field (American football)",
"text": " After playing a year of college football at the University of Hawaii, he transferred to and played at Oregon State University from 1932 until 1934. Professionally, he played in 34 games over three seasons for the Chicago Cardinals from 1934 to 1936 and the Los Angeles Bulldogs (AFL) in 1937. Field was chosen as a second team All-NFL member in his rookie season in 1934 by the Chicago Daily News and the United Press International.",
"score": "1.5277599"
},
{
"id": "5067166",
"title": "Harry Allen (bowls)",
"text": " Harry J Allen was a Canadian international lawn bowls player who competed in the 1930 British Empire Games.",
"score": "1.5222712"
},
{
"id": "31744204",
"title": "Harry Crump",
"text": " Harry M. Crump (born June 18, 1940 in Framingham, Massachusetts), nicknamed \"Harry the Thump\", is an American former football fullback who played for the Boston Patriots in the American Football League.",
"score": "1.5166173"
},
{
"id": "12123898",
"title": "Harry Archer (rugby)",
"text": " Henry \"Harry\" Archer (26 November 1932 – 24 June 2019 ), also known by the nickname of \"The Architect\", was an English rugby union, and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s, and coached rugby league in the 1980s. He played club level rugby union (RU) for Workington RFC, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Great Britain (non-Test matches), and Cumberland, and at club level for Dearham ARLFC (in Dearham), Grasslot and Glasson Rangers ARLFC (in Grasslot, Maryport/Glasson, Maryport, now known as Glasson Rangers ARLFC), Workington Town and Whitehaven, as a, i.e. number 6, and coached (jointly with Bill Smith ) at club level for Workington Town.",
"score": "1.5123842"
},
{
"id": "25609541",
"title": "Harry Thompson (American football)",
"text": " Harry Julius Thompson (January 8, 1926 – November 26, 2003) was an American football offensive guard who played six seasons in the National Football League with the Los Angeles Rams and Chicago Cardinals. He first enrolled at Los Angeles City College before transferring to the University of California, Los Angeles. He attended Los Angeles High School in Los Angeles.",
"score": "1.5121522"
},
{
"id": "25661716",
"title": "Harry Field (American football)",
"text": " In 1980, Field was recognized as an inductee of Athletic Hall of Fame for football, track and swimming at Punahou School, representing the class of 1930. He is also a 2021 finalist for induction into the Polynesian Football Hall of Fame.",
"score": "1.510324"
},
{
"id": "6608192",
"title": "Harry Martin (field hockey)",
"text": " Harry John Martin (born 23 October 1992) is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder for HC Rotterdam and the England and Great Britain national teams. His sister, Hannah Martin is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder or forward for England and Great Britain.",
"score": "1.51005"
},
{
"id": "32631963",
"title": "Harry van der Meer",
"text": " Henricus Antonius Wilhelmus \"Harry\" van der Meer (born October 30, 1973 in Veenendaal) is a former water polo forward from the Netherlands, who participated in three Summer Olympics. From 1992 on he finished in ninth (Barcelona), tenth (Atlanta, Georgia) and eleventh (Sydney) position with the National Men's Team. Now, he is a coach.",
"score": "1.4962553"
}
] | [
"Thomas Clay\n In 1923 Thomas had been a trialist for Leicestershire County Cricket Club and between 1926 and 1929 during his time at Spurs he took up cricket coaching at Public Schools including Highgate, St Paul's and Berkhamsted. He coached Dutch football side HVV Den Haag between 1937 and 1939. After retiring from football he subsequently ran a pub and sports outfitters in St Albans. He was working as a builders' labourer in Southend-on-Sea when he died in 1949, aged 56.",
"Harry Batstone\n Harry \"Red\" Batstone (September 5, 1899 – March 10, 1972) was a Canadian football player who played three seasons in the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union for the Toronto Argonauts and six seasons in the intercollegiate union for Queen's University. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in the founding cohort in 1963, and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.",
"Harry Gibson (field hockey)\n Harry Jay Gibson (born 25 March 1993) is an English field hockey player, who plays as a goalkeeper for Surbiton and the England and Great Britain national teams. He was educated at Millfield.",
"Harry Cahill\n When playing for Coventry & North Warwickshire Hockey Club in the 1960s, Cahill trained with Coventry City F.C., then managed by Jimmy Hill. Hill allegedly offered Cahill professional terms as an association footballer. In 1974 he helped Coventry & North Warwickshire win the Midlands League. He also played for Tamworth and eventually finished his field hockey playing career with Worthing, helping them to win the 1981 Sussex Cup when aged over 50. He continued playing in veterans competitions into his late 50s and also served as Worthing club captain between 1986 and 1990. At club level he often chose to play outfield as an inside-right. While playing in England, Cahill also represented Warwickshire, Staffordshire and Buckinghamshire at inter-county level.",
"Harry Vriend\n Henri \"Harry\" Gerard Vriend (born 20 May 1938) is a former water polo player from the Netherlands, who competed at the 1960 and 1964 Summer Olympics; in both games he finished in eighth position with the Dutch Men's Team. His brother Wim played alongside Harry at the 1964 games. On 4 October 1963, Vriend married the Dutch swimmer Lenie de Nijs. He subsequently became a water polo coach and served as the head coach of the men's national team. Vriend later worked for NOS Studio Sport, a Dutch TV program, as a commentator.",
"Liz Clay\n Clay was a keen dancer when she was young. She became interested in athletics after watching her younger brother Harry compete, and joined Hornsby Little Athletics as an under-10. She made her junior international debut at the 2014 World Juniors in the 100m hurdles, but had to withdraw from the team when she broke her navicular bone weeks before the team departed. Clay then completed an exercise and sports science degree in Sydney and relocated to the Gold Coast to work with Australian hurdles coach, Sharon Hannan, who had guided Sally Pearson to Olympic gold in 2012.",
"Thomas Clay\n Tommy Clay (19 November 1892 – 21 February 1949) was a professional footballer who played fullback for Leicester Fosse (the original name for Leicester City), Tottenham Hotspur and England during the 1910s and 1920s.",
"Harry Rusan\n Harry Alfonso Rusan (April 1, 1910 – November 9, 1987) was an American basketball player for the Harlem Globetrotters and a Negro league baseball shortstop in the 1930s. A native of St. Louis, Missouri, Rusan attended Paul Quinn College. He played professional baseball for the Brooklyn Royal Giants in 1931, and his basketball career with the Harlem Globetrotters spanned from 1933 to 1942. Rusan died in Detroit, Michigan in 1987 at age 77.",
"Harry Croft\n Henry T. \"Harry\" Croft (August 1, 1875 – December 11, 1933) was a professional baseball player from 1899 to 1901, playing for three Major League teams: the Chicago Orphans, the Philadelphia Phillies, and the Louisville Colonels.",
"William Harry\n William Richard Harry (30 November 1877 – 21 February 1943) was an Australian rules footballer who played in one game for in 1906. The oldest of twelve children, Harry was recruited to Carlton by Jack Worrall and made his debut in Round 11, 1906, against at Princes Park. After his solitary game for Carlton, he returned to his family in Rutherglen. He continued to play for Rutherglen before retiring to become an umpire. Harry died in 1943 after drowning in the Murray River attempting to retrieve a duck he had just shot.",
"Harry Gibson (field hockey)\n Gibson plays club hockey in the Men's England Hockey League Premier Division for Surbiton. He previously played for Loughborough Students and Hampstead & Westminster.",
"Harry Brown (basketball)\n Harry Truman Brown (October 22, 1948 January 10, 2021) was an American basketball player and educator who promoted the game of basketball in the Toronto area.",
"Harry Field (American football)\n After playing a year of college football at the University of Hawaii, he transferred to and played at Oregon State University from 1932 until 1934. Professionally, he played in 34 games over three seasons for the Chicago Cardinals from 1934 to 1936 and the Los Angeles Bulldogs (AFL) in 1937. Field was chosen as a second team All-NFL member in his rookie season in 1934 by the Chicago Daily News and the United Press International.",
"Harry Allen (bowls)\n Harry J Allen was a Canadian international lawn bowls player who competed in the 1930 British Empire Games.",
"Harry Crump\n Harry M. Crump (born June 18, 1940 in Framingham, Massachusetts), nicknamed \"Harry the Thump\", is an American former football fullback who played for the Boston Patriots in the American Football League.",
"Harry Archer (rugby)\n Henry \"Harry\" Archer (26 November 1932 – 24 June 2019 ), also known by the nickname of \"The Architect\", was an English rugby union, and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s, and coached rugby league in the 1980s. He played club level rugby union (RU) for Workington RFC, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Great Britain (non-Test matches), and Cumberland, and at club level for Dearham ARLFC (in Dearham), Grasslot and Glasson Rangers ARLFC (in Grasslot, Maryport/Glasson, Maryport, now known as Glasson Rangers ARLFC), Workington Town and Whitehaven, as a, i.e. number 6, and coached (jointly with Bill Smith ) at club level for Workington Town.",
"Harry Thompson (American football)\n Harry Julius Thompson (January 8, 1926 – November 26, 2003) was an American football offensive guard who played six seasons in the National Football League with the Los Angeles Rams and Chicago Cardinals. He first enrolled at Los Angeles City College before transferring to the University of California, Los Angeles. He attended Los Angeles High School in Los Angeles.",
"Harry Field (American football)\n In 1980, Field was recognized as an inductee of Athletic Hall of Fame for football, track and swimming at Punahou School, representing the class of 1930. He is also a 2021 finalist for induction into the Polynesian Football Hall of Fame.",
"Harry Martin (field hockey)\n Harry John Martin (born 23 October 1992) is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder for HC Rotterdam and the England and Great Britain national teams. His sister, Hannah Martin is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder or forward for England and Great Britain.",
"Harry van der Meer\n Henricus Antonius Wilhelmus \"Harry\" van der Meer (born October 30, 1973 in Veenendaal) is a former water polo forward from the Netherlands, who participated in three Summer Olympics. From 1992 on he finished in ninth (Barcelona), tenth (Atlanta, Georgia) and eleventh (Sydney) position with the National Men's Team. Now, he is a coach."
] |
What sport does Maxwell Griffin play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Maxwell Griffin | 5,126,882 | 89 | [
{
"id": "4071901",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": " Maxwell Griffin (born September 17, 1987 in Riverside, California) is a retired American soccer player.",
"score": "1.8414872"
},
{
"id": "4071905",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": " Maxwell is the younger brother of fellow professional soccer player Leonard Griffin. Griffin has also dabbled in acting, and featured in JoJo's music video for her 2006 hit song \"Too Little Too Late\" alongside several of his UCLA Bruins teammates.",
"score": "1.7947588"
},
{
"id": "4071902",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": " Griffin attended Littlerock High School and played college soccer at the UCLA from 2006 to 2009, where he racked up a litany of accolades, receiving a selection to the All-Pac-10 team, and an NSCAA All-Far West selection. He was also nominated for the prestigious Lowe's Senior CLASS Award, and as a senior led the team with four game-winning goals, moving him up to sixth in the all-time UCLA scoring record books. Griffin netted 28 goals overall in his career, increasing his total in each of the four seasons at the school and is one of just 18 players to have scored a hat trick for UCLA in its 43-year history. During his college years Griffin also played with the San Fernando Valley Quakes and the Los Angeles Legends in the USL Premier Development League.",
"score": "1.776195"
},
{
"id": "12594656",
"title": "Malcolm Griffin (basketball)",
"text": " Griffin played high school basketball at Hyde Park Career Academy at Chicago, Illinois. He led his team to a 27–5 mark as a senior and averaging 17 points, seven assists and five rebounds per game. Griffin also earned South MVP honors in the Chicago Classic All-Star Game, scoring 28 points in just 13 minutes of action.",
"score": "1.7289085"
},
{
"id": "4071904",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": " Griffin officially retired from professional soccer in April 2014. On his official Facebook page, Griffin stated \"After 22 years of playing soccer and these last 4 playing professionally, I've decided to hang up the boots. It's sad to think that I won't be playing as a career anymore, but I am beyond excited to be starting the next chapter of my life at the adidas HQ in Portland. I have met so many amazing people and created lifelong friendships along the way. So thankful and blessed to have had the support of my friends and family throughout my life and career. Also a huge thank you to PROficient Agency for creating so many opportunities for me as a player and making this a very exciting journey.\"",
"score": "1.7178978"
},
{
"id": "1330153",
"title": "Leonard Griffin",
"text": " Leonard is the older brother of fellow professional soccer player Maxwell Griffin. His brother-in-law Spencer Thompson was also a professional soccer player who played for the Portland Timbers.",
"score": "1.6914437"
},
{
"id": "4071906",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": "Orlando City ; USL Pro: 2011 ",
"score": "1.6805773"
},
{
"id": "27957831",
"title": "AJ Griffin",
"text": " Griffin played basketball for Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, New York. As a freshman, he played with his older brother, Alan, and helped his team win its first Catholic High School Athletic Association (CHSAA) Archdiocesan title since 1984. In his sophomore season, he and R. J. Davis formed one of the top backcourts in the nation. Griffin averaged 20.9 points, 10.9 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 3.5 blocks per game. As a junior, he averaged 17.7 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 2.3 blocks per game, missing most of the season with a knee injury, and led Stepinac to the CHSAA Archdiocesan title. Griffin was sidelined for his senior season by an ankle injury. He was named to the McDonald's All-American Game and Jordan Brand Classic rosters.",
"score": "1.6552837"
},
{
"id": "9280907",
"title": "Leonard Griffin (baseball)",
"text": " Leonard Griffin (July 1887 – death date unknown) was an American Negro league shortstop between 1907 and 1910. A native of Columbia, Kentucky, Griffin made his Negro leagues debut in 1907 with the Indianapolis ABCs. He played for Indianapolis again in 1909, and went on to play for the New York Black Sox in 1910.",
"score": "1.6505842"
},
{
"id": "30857090",
"title": "Cedric Griffin",
"text": " Griffin played football at Oliver Wendell Holmes High School in San Antonio, Texas under the direction of head coach David Sanchez. He was an All-State Class 5A defensive back in 2000, his senior season. He also played as a wide receiver and accumulated yards rushing and in kick-off and punt returns. As a cornerback, he made 26 tackles and seven interceptions. As a wide receiver, he caught eight passes for 202 yards, including two touchdowns. The same year, he rushed for 198 yards, made a 90-yard kickoff return and returned two punts for 95 yards against Taft High. Griffin played in the first ever U.S. Army All-American Bowl on December 30, 2000. In addition to football, he competed in track. While playing at Holmes High School, Griffin was a part of a State Semifinalist squad that fell one game short of the State Championship. Other standout athletes who played with Griffin on the Holmes football squad include Olympic Gold Medalist in 4 × 400 meter relay Darold Williamson, Robert Quiroga of the Arena Football League, standout defensive tackle at Baylor University Michael Gary, and Division II All-American quarterback from Texas Lutheran University Sean Salinas.",
"score": "1.6434965"
},
{
"id": "13520377",
"title": "Keith Griffin (American football)",
"text": " Keith B. Griffin (born October 26, 1961) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Washington Redskins. He played college football at the University of Miami. Griffin was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated on January 9, 1984, for the story of the Hurricanes' dramatic victory over the #1 ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers 31–30 in the January 1, 1984, Orange Bowl. The 11–1–0 Hurricanes broke the Cornhuskers' 22-game win streak. Keith is the younger brother to two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin.",
"score": "1.6299896"
},
{
"id": "13737470",
"title": "Brian Griffin (lacrosse)",
"text": " Brian Griffin (16 April 1941 – 17 June 2020) was an Australian lacrosse player and one of only two lacrosse players to be inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Griffin commenced playing in 1953 for the Nedlands-Subiaco Lacrosse Club in Western Australia, making his A Grade debut in 1957. An attacker of the highest quality, Griffin first represented Australia in their 1962 overseas tour. He took out Australia's highest individual honour in winning the OC Isaachsen Trophy as Australia's best and fairest men's lacrosse player in 1966. Griffin captained the Australian side at the inaugural World Championship in Toronto, Canada, in 1967, and was selected as Australia's most valuable player for the tournament. Being able to throw and catch with both ",
"score": "1.6269703"
},
{
"id": "11061331",
"title": "Ryan Moats",
"text": " In the summer of 2013, Moats joined the Griffins Rugby Club in Allen, TX to become one of the first NFL athletes to play the sport. The Griffins, formerly the Frisco Griffins, are a semi-pro team with strong affiliations with English Premiership Rugby.",
"score": "1.6191609"
},
{
"id": "1330149",
"title": "Leonard Griffin",
"text": " Griffin attended Littlerock High School in Littlerock, California, and was a four-year letterman in soccer. He was a three-time first team All-League honoree, and as a senior, he was a Los Angeles Daily News first team All-Area honoree, and set the school single-season record for goals (24 goals). Griffin played college soccer at the UCLA from 2000 to 2003. Griffin distinguished himself at the school, helping the team win a national championship in 2002, and being named an NCAA All-American in 2003. During his college years he also played with Orange County Blue Star in the USL Premier Development League, where he played alongside Jürgen Klinsmann.",
"score": "1.615878"
},
{
"id": "31833924",
"title": "John-Ford Griffin",
"text": " An All-State athlete at Sarasota High School, was part of a state championship team in 1996 for the Sailors. Griffin played college baseball under head coach Mike Martin for the Florida State University Seminoles from 1999 to 2001. Griffin's career batting average was .427, a Florida State record at the time.",
"score": "1.614522"
},
{
"id": "4071903",
"title": "Maxwell Griffin",
"text": " Upon graduating from UCLA, Griffin signed a one-year deal with the Austin Aztex FC of the USSF Division 2 on March 23, 2010. He made his professional debut on April 11, 2010, in Austin's first game of the 2010 season, a 2–0 victory over Montreal Impact, scored his first professional goal on May 29 in a 2–0 win over Crystal Palace Baltimore, and scored a hat trick on June 19, 2010 in a 3–1 win over Miami FC. Prior to the 2011 season, new owners purchased the club and moved it to Orlando, Florida, renaming it Orlando City. The club will play in the USL Pro league in 2011. At the end of the 2011 USL Pro season, Griffin moved on loan to San Jose Earthquakes. He last played for Minnesota United FC in the North American Soccer League.",
"score": "1.6118073"
},
{
"id": "1867339",
"title": "Eric Griffin (basketball)",
"text": " Griffin attended Maynard Evans High School in Orlando, Florida, before transferring to Boone High School for his senior year after being cut multiple times from the basketball team at Evans. At Boone, he met head coach and former LSU guard Willie Anderson, who recognized Griffin's freakish athleticism and unrelenting hunger for greatness. Anderson was the first one to give Griffin a chance, and he didn't disappoint. Following a solid first year of organized basketball, Griffin went on to play for Hiwassee Community College in Tennessee, where he averaged 16 points, six rebounds and two blocks per game in 2008–09. But when the small junior college lost its accreditation in 2009, Griffin was forced to move on. He transferred to Garden City Community College in Kansas, and in 2009–10, he played 32 games, averaging ",
"score": "1.6108415"
},
{
"id": "31008667",
"title": "Leonard Griffin (American football)",
"text": " Leonard James Griffin Jr. (born September 22, 1962) is a former American football defensive end who played eight seasons in the National Football League for the Kansas City Chiefs. He was a 3rd round selection by the Chiefs in the 1986 NFL Draft out of Grambling State. He retired from the NFL and took up teaching at West Ouachita High School. He began as a P.E. teacher and a Defensive Line Coach. He is now in administration at the school.",
"score": "1.6072993"
},
{
"id": "5133309",
"title": "Rod Griffin",
"text": " In 2005, Griffin played for the Wynnum Manly Seagulls in the Queensland Cup. In 2006, he moved down to Sydney, New South Wales to play in the Wests Tigers' junior grades.",
"score": "1.6036732"
},
{
"id": "9292986",
"title": "Ty Griffin",
"text": " Griffin attended C. Leon King High School and the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he played for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets baseball team in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). At Georgia Tech, Griffin was named an All-ACC second baseman and the Most Valuable Player of the 1988 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament. Griffin was part of the United States national baseball team competing in the 1987 Pan American Games and 1988 Summer Olympics. The Chicago Cubs drafted Griffin in the first round (9th overall) of the 1988 Major League Baseball Draft. He made his professional debut with the Peoria Chiefs of the Class-A Midwest League in 1989, and was promoted to the Charlotte Knights of the Class-AA Southern League that year. Baseball America rated Griffin the ",
"score": "1.6030412"
}
] | [
"Maxwell Griffin\n Maxwell Griffin (born September 17, 1987 in Riverside, California) is a retired American soccer player.",
"Maxwell Griffin\n Maxwell is the younger brother of fellow professional soccer player Leonard Griffin. Griffin has also dabbled in acting, and featured in JoJo's music video for her 2006 hit song \"Too Little Too Late\" alongside several of his UCLA Bruins teammates.",
"Maxwell Griffin\n Griffin attended Littlerock High School and played college soccer at the UCLA from 2006 to 2009, where he racked up a litany of accolades, receiving a selection to the All-Pac-10 team, and an NSCAA All-Far West selection. He was also nominated for the prestigious Lowe's Senior CLASS Award, and as a senior led the team with four game-winning goals, moving him up to sixth in the all-time UCLA scoring record books. Griffin netted 28 goals overall in his career, increasing his total in each of the four seasons at the school and is one of just 18 players to have scored a hat trick for UCLA in its 43-year history. During his college years Griffin also played with the San Fernando Valley Quakes and the Los Angeles Legends in the USL Premier Development League.",
"Malcolm Griffin (basketball)\n Griffin played high school basketball at Hyde Park Career Academy at Chicago, Illinois. He led his team to a 27–5 mark as a senior and averaging 17 points, seven assists and five rebounds per game. Griffin also earned South MVP honors in the Chicago Classic All-Star Game, scoring 28 points in just 13 minutes of action.",
"Maxwell Griffin\n Griffin officially retired from professional soccer in April 2014. On his official Facebook page, Griffin stated \"After 22 years of playing soccer and these last 4 playing professionally, I've decided to hang up the boots. It's sad to think that I won't be playing as a career anymore, but I am beyond excited to be starting the next chapter of my life at the adidas HQ in Portland. I have met so many amazing people and created lifelong friendships along the way. So thankful and blessed to have had the support of my friends and family throughout my life and career. Also a huge thank you to PROficient Agency for creating so many opportunities for me as a player and making this a very exciting journey.\"",
"Leonard Griffin\n Leonard is the older brother of fellow professional soccer player Maxwell Griffin. His brother-in-law Spencer Thompson was also a professional soccer player who played for the Portland Timbers.",
"Maxwell Griffin\nOrlando City ; USL Pro: 2011 ",
"AJ Griffin\n Griffin played basketball for Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, New York. As a freshman, he played with his older brother, Alan, and helped his team win its first Catholic High School Athletic Association (CHSAA) Archdiocesan title since 1984. In his sophomore season, he and R. J. Davis formed one of the top backcourts in the nation. Griffin averaged 20.9 points, 10.9 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 3.5 blocks per game. As a junior, he averaged 17.7 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 2.3 blocks per game, missing most of the season with a knee injury, and led Stepinac to the CHSAA Archdiocesan title. Griffin was sidelined for his senior season by an ankle injury. He was named to the McDonald's All-American Game and Jordan Brand Classic rosters.",
"Leonard Griffin (baseball)\n Leonard Griffin (July 1887 – death date unknown) was an American Negro league shortstop between 1907 and 1910. A native of Columbia, Kentucky, Griffin made his Negro leagues debut in 1907 with the Indianapolis ABCs. He played for Indianapolis again in 1909, and went on to play for the New York Black Sox in 1910.",
"Cedric Griffin\n Griffin played football at Oliver Wendell Holmes High School in San Antonio, Texas under the direction of head coach David Sanchez. He was an All-State Class 5A defensive back in 2000, his senior season. He also played as a wide receiver and accumulated yards rushing and in kick-off and punt returns. As a cornerback, he made 26 tackles and seven interceptions. As a wide receiver, he caught eight passes for 202 yards, including two touchdowns. The same year, he rushed for 198 yards, made a 90-yard kickoff return and returned two punts for 95 yards against Taft High. Griffin played in the first ever U.S. Army All-American Bowl on December 30, 2000. In addition to football, he competed in track. While playing at Holmes High School, Griffin was a part of a State Semifinalist squad that fell one game short of the State Championship. Other standout athletes who played with Griffin on the Holmes football squad include Olympic Gold Medalist in 4 × 400 meter relay Darold Williamson, Robert Quiroga of the Arena Football League, standout defensive tackle at Baylor University Michael Gary, and Division II All-American quarterback from Texas Lutheran University Sean Salinas.",
"Keith Griffin (American football)\n Keith B. Griffin (born October 26, 1961) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Washington Redskins. He played college football at the University of Miami. Griffin was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated on January 9, 1984, for the story of the Hurricanes' dramatic victory over the #1 ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers 31–30 in the January 1, 1984, Orange Bowl. The 11–1–0 Hurricanes broke the Cornhuskers' 22-game win streak. Keith is the younger brother to two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin.",
"Brian Griffin (lacrosse)\n Brian Griffin (16 April 1941 – 17 June 2020) was an Australian lacrosse player and one of only two lacrosse players to be inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Griffin commenced playing in 1953 for the Nedlands-Subiaco Lacrosse Club in Western Australia, making his A Grade debut in 1957. An attacker of the highest quality, Griffin first represented Australia in their 1962 overseas tour. He took out Australia's highest individual honour in winning the OC Isaachsen Trophy as Australia's best and fairest men's lacrosse player in 1966. Griffin captained the Australian side at the inaugural World Championship in Toronto, Canada, in 1967, and was selected as Australia's most valuable player for the tournament. Being able to throw and catch with both ",
"Ryan Moats\n In the summer of 2013, Moats joined the Griffins Rugby Club in Allen, TX to become one of the first NFL athletes to play the sport. The Griffins, formerly the Frisco Griffins, are a semi-pro team with strong affiliations with English Premiership Rugby.",
"Leonard Griffin\n Griffin attended Littlerock High School in Littlerock, California, and was a four-year letterman in soccer. He was a three-time first team All-League honoree, and as a senior, he was a Los Angeles Daily News first team All-Area honoree, and set the school single-season record for goals (24 goals). Griffin played college soccer at the UCLA from 2000 to 2003. Griffin distinguished himself at the school, helping the team win a national championship in 2002, and being named an NCAA All-American in 2003. During his college years he also played with Orange County Blue Star in the USL Premier Development League, where he played alongside Jürgen Klinsmann.",
"John-Ford Griffin\n An All-State athlete at Sarasota High School, was part of a state championship team in 1996 for the Sailors. Griffin played college baseball under head coach Mike Martin for the Florida State University Seminoles from 1999 to 2001. Griffin's career batting average was .427, a Florida State record at the time.",
"Maxwell Griffin\n Upon graduating from UCLA, Griffin signed a one-year deal with the Austin Aztex FC of the USSF Division 2 on March 23, 2010. He made his professional debut on April 11, 2010, in Austin's first game of the 2010 season, a 2–0 victory over Montreal Impact, scored his first professional goal on May 29 in a 2–0 win over Crystal Palace Baltimore, and scored a hat trick on June 19, 2010 in a 3–1 win over Miami FC. Prior to the 2011 season, new owners purchased the club and moved it to Orlando, Florida, renaming it Orlando City. The club will play in the USL Pro league in 2011. At the end of the 2011 USL Pro season, Griffin moved on loan to San Jose Earthquakes. He last played for Minnesota United FC in the North American Soccer League.",
"Eric Griffin (basketball)\n Griffin attended Maynard Evans High School in Orlando, Florida, before transferring to Boone High School for his senior year after being cut multiple times from the basketball team at Evans. At Boone, he met head coach and former LSU guard Willie Anderson, who recognized Griffin's freakish athleticism and unrelenting hunger for greatness. Anderson was the first one to give Griffin a chance, and he didn't disappoint. Following a solid first year of organized basketball, Griffin went on to play for Hiwassee Community College in Tennessee, where he averaged 16 points, six rebounds and two blocks per game in 2008–09. But when the small junior college lost its accreditation in 2009, Griffin was forced to move on. He transferred to Garden City Community College in Kansas, and in 2009–10, he played 32 games, averaging ",
"Leonard Griffin (American football)\n Leonard James Griffin Jr. (born September 22, 1962) is a former American football defensive end who played eight seasons in the National Football League for the Kansas City Chiefs. He was a 3rd round selection by the Chiefs in the 1986 NFL Draft out of Grambling State. He retired from the NFL and took up teaching at West Ouachita High School. He began as a P.E. teacher and a Defensive Line Coach. He is now in administration at the school.",
"Rod Griffin\n In 2005, Griffin played for the Wynnum Manly Seagulls in the Queensland Cup. In 2006, he moved down to Sydney, New South Wales to play in the Wests Tigers' junior grades.",
"Ty Griffin\n Griffin attended C. Leon King High School and the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he played for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets baseball team in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). At Georgia Tech, Griffin was named an All-ACC second baseman and the Most Valuable Player of the 1988 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament. Griffin was part of the United States national baseball team competing in the 1987 Pan American Games and 1988 Summer Olympics. The Chicago Cubs drafted Griffin in the first round (9th overall) of the 1988 Major League Baseball Draft. He made his professional debut with the Peoria Chiefs of the Class-A Midwest League in 1989, and was promoted to the Charlotte Knights of the Class-AA Southern League that year. Baseball America rated Griffin the "
] |
What sport does Yuri Koroviansky play? | [
"volleyball"
] | sport | Yuri Koroviansky | 2,714,297 | 44 | [
{
"id": "15463576",
"title": "Yuri Koroviansky",
"text": " Yuri Koroviansky (Юрий Коровянский, Yuriy Korovyanskyy, 30 September 1967 – 8 March 2017) was a Ukrainian volleyball player who competed for the Unified Team in the 1992 Summer Olympics. He was 194 cm tall. He was French citizen from 2011 until his death.",
"score": "1.8091004"
},
{
"id": "15463577",
"title": "Yuri Koroviansky",
"text": " Koroviansky was born at Horlivka and debuted in 1984 for VC Shakhtar Donetsk. He finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1991 World League. Koroviansky played in Greece from 1993 with AO Orestiada (Runner-up of the Greek championship and finished 4th in the CEV Cup final four). After one year in Greece, he signed in Cyprus for Paphiakos Paphos. He subsequently played in France with Tourcoing, Tours, Paris (won the French championship in 1997 ), Strasbourg, Halluin and he concluded his playing career in 2006 with Cambrai (in French 2nd league). He was the head coach of youth team in Cambrai.",
"score": "1.8027925"
},
{
"id": "15463579",
"title": "Yuri Koroviansky",
"text": "1 World Cup (1991) ; 1 European Championship (1991) ",
"score": "1.7027414"
},
{
"id": "15463578",
"title": "Yuri Koroviansky",
"text": "1 Soviet Championship (1992) ; 1 Ukrainian Championship (1993) ; 1 French Championship (1998) ",
"score": "1.6479119"
},
{
"id": "10533738",
"title": "Yuriy Ovcharov",
"text": " A pupil of Luhansk football. From 1984 to 1988 he played for Desna Chernihiv in the Ukrainian Second League. In 1989 he moved to Kosonsoy, where he became a silver medalist of the second league in 1990 (zone 9). In 1991 he returned to Desna Chernihiv. The first match in the championship of Ukraine was played on May 3, 1992 in the 13th round of the Ukrainian First League against Sumy \"Motorist\" (1: 2). In the fall of 1993 he played for Polissya Zhytomyr. In 1994 he became a player of Stal Alchevsk. For two seasons as a member of the Kirovograd team he won a ",
"score": "1.5085816"
},
{
"id": "9620176",
"title": "Yuri Cherednik",
"text": " Cherednik was born at Chişinău and debuted in 1983 for Motorist Leningrad. In 1988 he was part of the Soviet team which won the silver medal in the Olympic tournament. He played four matches. Four years later he finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won also a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1990 Championship. Cherednik played in Italy from 1992 with Centromatic Prato (winning the title of MVP of Italy's A1 League that year). He subsequently played for Macerata, Bologna, Ferrara and others, before returning to Russia in 2006, where he concluded his playing career in 2007 with the Spartak St. Petersburg.",
"score": "1.5069338"
},
{
"id": "14531852",
"title": "Andrei Kovalenko (water polo)",
"text": " Andrei Kovalenko (Андрій Коваленко; born 6 November 1970 in Kiev) is an Australian water polo player and current coach of the UWA Torpedoes Men's Water Polo team and coach of the u18 and u16 UWA City Beach Bears. He competed for Australia at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, as well as for CIS at Barcelona 1992 in which he won a bronze medal and Ukraine at Atlanta 1996. In 2007 he helped Australia attain a bronze medal in the FINA Water Polo World League. In recent years, Andrei has starting playing Men's Softball for the Woodlands Wolves Ball Club. Andrei has started to refine his pitching (underarm), and shown his skills in the outfield with his \"Rocket for an Arm\". In the off season, Andrei has also started playing Baseball for the Wembley Magpies Baseball Club. Andrei is a reliable pitcher, picking up different variations with ease.",
"score": "1.4981534"
},
{
"id": "6047867",
"title": "Yuri Vanyat",
"text": " Played in the youth team goalkeeper Pishevik (Moscow). Graduated from high school coaches at the Institute of Physical Education. Covers all the Soviet Top League and hockey finals of the USSR Cup. Worked at 8 Olympic hockey tournament and 7 of the World Cup, 28 ice hockey world championships. Almost 40 years was a member of various committees of the Football Federation of the USSR, was a member of the National Olympic Committee of the USSR. In 1933–1949 he worked in the newspaper Red Sports (since 1946 — Soviet Sport). In 1950–1986 — in the newspaper Trud. In 1987–1992 — the newspaper Moskovskaya Pravda.",
"score": "1.4942336"
},
{
"id": "27562225",
"title": "Yuri Shundrov",
"text": " Shundrov began his career with Sokil Kyiv in the Soviet Championship League during the 1978–79 season. He played for Sokil exclusively until the 1990–91 season, which he split between them and KHK Crvena Zvezda of the Yugoslav Ice Hockey League. He then joined Khimik Voskresensk for the 1991–92 season and played for them until 1994, when he re-joined Sokil Kyiv. After three seasons spent with Sokil, he re-joined Khimik Voskresensk, who he played two more seasons with. Shundrov retired following the 1999–2000 season spent with Kryzhynka Kyiv and Rapid Bucuresti. Internationally, Shundrov played two exhibition games for the USSR against Czechoslovakia in 1985 and played for the Ukraine men's national ice hockey team at the World Championships in 1995 (Pool C), 1997 (Pool C), 1998 (Pool B), and 1999 (Top Division). Shundrov became the goaltending coach for HC CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League in 2011. He had previously been goaltending coach for Metallurg Magnitogorsk from 2008 to 2010. From 2014 to 2017, he was goalkeeping coach at HC Sochi.",
"score": "1.4927585"
},
{
"id": "828095",
"title": "Yuri Kovshov",
"text": " Yuri Aleksandrovich Kovshov (Юрий Александрович Ковшов; born 5 September 1951) is a former Ukrainian Soviet equestrian and Olympic champion. He was born in Kushka, Turkmen SSR, and was affiliated with VDFSO Kiev. He won a gold medal in team dressage at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and received a silver medal in individual dressage. His grandson Maksim took part at several dressage championships in the early 2010s.",
"score": "1.4726517"
},
{
"id": "3092391",
"title": "Yuri Korotkikh",
"text": " Yuri Pavlovich Korotkikh (Юрий Павлович Коротких; born 23 November 1939 – 29 February 2016) was a Soviet footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"score": "1.4721766"
},
{
"id": "32582264",
"title": "Ukrainians in Russia",
"text": " Soviet volleyball player, who won a silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Andrei Karyaka - Russian football coach and a former player who played as a midfielder ; Sergei Mamchur - football defender. ; Viktor Miroshnichenko - boxer, represented the USSR at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Soviet Union. ; Oleg Goncharenko - Distinguished Master of Sports of the USSR, was the first male Soviet speed skater to become World Allround Champion. ; Konstantin Yeryomenko - Russian futsal player who was named the greatest futsal player of the 20th century ; Dmitri Shkidchenko - figure skating ",
"score": "1.470516"
},
{
"id": "10116925",
"title": "Michael Kozlowski",
"text": " Michael was born in Kostanaiskaya Oblast, Kazakhstan, USSR. He was raised by mother Raisa Yakovleva, who was teacher of Russian Language and Literature, with two brothers. At a very young age Michael became involved and interested in hockey. He wanted to be a goalkeeper like Vladislav Tretiak and was sure that he will take his place in the future. Michael Kozlowski was always an excellent student in school, but with bad behavior. He was fair minded and always was fighting in unequal battles. He was small and it was hard to win. By suggestion of his cousin, at age 15 he started to learn boxing under guidance of V.E. Shairer (his student 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist Ivan Dychko) and Kenes Omarov with now desire to represent USSR flag on Olympic in Boxing and not in hockey.",
"score": "1.4594331"
},
{
"id": "5822366",
"title": "Eduard Koksharov",
"text": " Eduard Aleksandrovich Koksharov (Эдуард Александрович Кокшаров, born 4 November 1975) is a Russian handball player and coach of the Russian national team. He played as a left winger. He retired from his national team in 2012. He came to Celje from SKIF Krasnodar in the 1999–2000 season, at the age of 23. His biggest achievements include winning the gold medal at the 1997 World Championships and winning the handball tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, both with Russia. He was also the winner of the Champions League with Celje Pivovarna Laško in the 2003/04 season.",
"score": "1.4567887"
},
{
"id": "15371312",
"title": "Aleksey Rastvortsev",
"text": " Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.",
"score": "1.4554195"
},
{
"id": "10648428",
"title": "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)",
"text": " Yuri Vasilyevich Korolev (Юрий Васильевич Королёв; born 6 June 1934) is a Russian ice hockey administrator, and retired coach and civil servant. His career of educating athletes and coaches included the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports. He was head of the research group for the Soviet Union national ice hockey team for 28 years, when the Soviets won seventeen Ice Hockey World Championships and seven Winter Olympic Games gold medals. He later served an executive with the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia and the International Ice Hockey Federation. Korolev has been recognized with the Order of Friendship, induction into the Russian Hockey Hall of Fame, and the Paul Loicq Award.",
"score": "1.4525499"
},
{
"id": "10648430",
"title": "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)",
"text": " Korolev joined the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education in 1954, and began a career of educating athletes and coaches. From 1962 to 1974, he lectured at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and became its senior lecturer. He served as the head of the hockey department at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education from 1974 to 1983, and was the head teacher of its school of hockey coaches. From 1983 to 1989, he was the head coach of the football and ice hockey committee of the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports, and was the deputy of the council from 1987 to 1988. Korolev was also connected to both the Soviet Union national ice hockey team and the Soviet Union national junior ice hockey team. ",
"score": "1.4517571"
},
{
"id": "5659025",
"title": "Yuri Korneev",
"text": " Yuri Korneev (March 26, 1937 in Moscow, Soviet Union – June 17, 2002), was a Russian basketball player. At a height of 1.98 m (6'6\") tall, he played at the small forward position. He was among the 105 player nominees for the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors list.",
"score": "1.4491335"
},
{
"id": "28490126",
"title": "Vsevolod Bobrov",
"text": " Vsevolod Mikhailovich Bobrov (1 December 1922 – 1 July 1979) was a Soviet athlete, who excelled in football, bandy and ice hockey. He is considered one of the best Russians ever in each of those sports. Originally a football player, he played for CDKA Moscow, VVS Moscow, and Spartak Moscow, and represented the Soviet Union internationally at the 1952 Summer Olympics. After he quit football in 1953 he turned to ice hockey, which he had taken up when it was started in the Soviet Union in 1946. He was one of the first ice hockey players in the Soviet Union, and joined CDKA Moscow, playing for them and VVS Moscow before retiring in 1957. A leading scorer in the Soviet League, Bobrov was one ",
"score": "1.4488959"
},
{
"id": "15372307",
"title": "Yuri Petrov",
"text": " Yuri Anatolyevich Petrov (Юрий Анатольевич Петров; born July 18, 1974 in Kryvyi Rih) is a former footballer who spent most of his professional career in the Netherlands.",
"score": "1.4479449"
}
] | [
"Yuri Koroviansky\n Yuri Koroviansky (Юрий Коровянский, Yuriy Korovyanskyy, 30 September 1967 – 8 March 2017) was a Ukrainian volleyball player who competed for the Unified Team in the 1992 Summer Olympics. He was 194 cm tall. He was French citizen from 2011 until his death.",
"Yuri Koroviansky\n Koroviansky was born at Horlivka and debuted in 1984 for VC Shakhtar Donetsk. He finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1991 World League. Koroviansky played in Greece from 1993 with AO Orestiada (Runner-up of the Greek championship and finished 4th in the CEV Cup final four). After one year in Greece, he signed in Cyprus for Paphiakos Paphos. He subsequently played in France with Tourcoing, Tours, Paris (won the French championship in 1997 ), Strasbourg, Halluin and he concluded his playing career in 2006 with Cambrai (in French 2nd league). He was the head coach of youth team in Cambrai.",
"Yuri Koroviansky\n1 World Cup (1991) ; 1 European Championship (1991) ",
"Yuri Koroviansky\n1 Soviet Championship (1992) ; 1 Ukrainian Championship (1993) ; 1 French Championship (1998) ",
"Yuriy Ovcharov\n A pupil of Luhansk football. From 1984 to 1988 he played for Desna Chernihiv in the Ukrainian Second League. In 1989 he moved to Kosonsoy, where he became a silver medalist of the second league in 1990 (zone 9). In 1991 he returned to Desna Chernihiv. The first match in the championship of Ukraine was played on May 3, 1992 in the 13th round of the Ukrainian First League against Sumy \"Motorist\" (1: 2). In the fall of 1993 he played for Polissya Zhytomyr. In 1994 he became a player of Stal Alchevsk. For two seasons as a member of the Kirovograd team he won a ",
"Yuri Cherednik\n Cherednik was born at Chişinău and debuted in 1983 for Motorist Leningrad. In 1988 he was part of the Soviet team which won the silver medal in the Olympic tournament. He played four matches. Four years later he finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won also a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1990 Championship. Cherednik played in Italy from 1992 with Centromatic Prato (winning the title of MVP of Italy's A1 League that year). He subsequently played for Macerata, Bologna, Ferrara and others, before returning to Russia in 2006, where he concluded his playing career in 2007 with the Spartak St. Petersburg.",
"Andrei Kovalenko (water polo)\n Andrei Kovalenko (Андрій Коваленко; born 6 November 1970 in Kiev) is an Australian water polo player and current coach of the UWA Torpedoes Men's Water Polo team and coach of the u18 and u16 UWA City Beach Bears. He competed for Australia at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, as well as for CIS at Barcelona 1992 in which he won a bronze medal and Ukraine at Atlanta 1996. In 2007 he helped Australia attain a bronze medal in the FINA Water Polo World League. In recent years, Andrei has starting playing Men's Softball for the Woodlands Wolves Ball Club. Andrei has started to refine his pitching (underarm), and shown his skills in the outfield with his \"Rocket for an Arm\". In the off season, Andrei has also started playing Baseball for the Wembley Magpies Baseball Club. Andrei is a reliable pitcher, picking up different variations with ease.",
"Yuri Vanyat\n Played in the youth team goalkeeper Pishevik (Moscow). Graduated from high school coaches at the Institute of Physical Education. Covers all the Soviet Top League and hockey finals of the USSR Cup. Worked at 8 Olympic hockey tournament and 7 of the World Cup, 28 ice hockey world championships. Almost 40 years was a member of various committees of the Football Federation of the USSR, was a member of the National Olympic Committee of the USSR. In 1933–1949 he worked in the newspaper Red Sports (since 1946 — Soviet Sport). In 1950–1986 — in the newspaper Trud. In 1987–1992 — the newspaper Moskovskaya Pravda.",
"Yuri Shundrov\n Shundrov began his career with Sokil Kyiv in the Soviet Championship League during the 1978–79 season. He played for Sokil exclusively until the 1990–91 season, which he split between them and KHK Crvena Zvezda of the Yugoslav Ice Hockey League. He then joined Khimik Voskresensk for the 1991–92 season and played for them until 1994, when he re-joined Sokil Kyiv. After three seasons spent with Sokil, he re-joined Khimik Voskresensk, who he played two more seasons with. Shundrov retired following the 1999–2000 season spent with Kryzhynka Kyiv and Rapid Bucuresti. Internationally, Shundrov played two exhibition games for the USSR against Czechoslovakia in 1985 and played for the Ukraine men's national ice hockey team at the World Championships in 1995 (Pool C), 1997 (Pool C), 1998 (Pool B), and 1999 (Top Division). Shundrov became the goaltending coach for HC CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League in 2011. He had previously been goaltending coach for Metallurg Magnitogorsk from 2008 to 2010. From 2014 to 2017, he was goalkeeping coach at HC Sochi.",
"Yuri Kovshov\n Yuri Aleksandrovich Kovshov (Юрий Александрович Ковшов; born 5 September 1951) is a former Ukrainian Soviet equestrian and Olympic champion. He was born in Kushka, Turkmen SSR, and was affiliated with VDFSO Kiev. He won a gold medal in team dressage at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and received a silver medal in individual dressage. His grandson Maksim took part at several dressage championships in the early 2010s.",
"Yuri Korotkikh\n Yuri Pavlovich Korotkikh (Юрий Павлович Коротких; born 23 November 1939 – 29 February 2016) was a Soviet footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"Ukrainians in Russia\n Soviet volleyball player, who won a silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Andrei Karyaka - Russian football coach and a former player who played as a midfielder ; Sergei Mamchur - football defender. ; Viktor Miroshnichenko - boxer, represented the USSR at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Soviet Union. ; Oleg Goncharenko - Distinguished Master of Sports of the USSR, was the first male Soviet speed skater to become World Allround Champion. ; Konstantin Yeryomenko - Russian futsal player who was named the greatest futsal player of the 20th century ; Dmitri Shkidchenko - figure skating ",
"Michael Kozlowski\n Michael was born in Kostanaiskaya Oblast, Kazakhstan, USSR. He was raised by mother Raisa Yakovleva, who was teacher of Russian Language and Literature, with two brothers. At a very young age Michael became involved and interested in hockey. He wanted to be a goalkeeper like Vladislav Tretiak and was sure that he will take his place in the future. Michael Kozlowski was always an excellent student in school, but with bad behavior. He was fair minded and always was fighting in unequal battles. He was small and it was hard to win. By suggestion of his cousin, at age 15 he started to learn boxing under guidance of V.E. Shairer (his student 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist Ivan Dychko) and Kenes Omarov with now desire to represent USSR flag on Olympic in Boxing and not in hockey.",
"Eduard Koksharov\n Eduard Aleksandrovich Koksharov (Эдуард Александрович Кокшаров, born 4 November 1975) is a Russian handball player and coach of the Russian national team. He played as a left winger. He retired from his national team in 2012. He came to Celje from SKIF Krasnodar in the 1999–2000 season, at the age of 23. His biggest achievements include winning the gold medal at the 1997 World Championships and winning the handball tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, both with Russia. He was also the winner of the Champions League with Celje Pivovarna Laško in the 2003/04 season.",
"Aleksey Rastvortsev\n Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.",
"Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)\n Yuri Vasilyevich Korolev (Юрий Васильевич Королёв; born 6 June 1934) is a Russian ice hockey administrator, and retired coach and civil servant. His career of educating athletes and coaches included the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports. He was head of the research group for the Soviet Union national ice hockey team for 28 years, when the Soviets won seventeen Ice Hockey World Championships and seven Winter Olympic Games gold medals. He later served an executive with the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia and the International Ice Hockey Federation. Korolev has been recognized with the Order of Friendship, induction into the Russian Hockey Hall of Fame, and the Paul Loicq Award.",
"Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)\n Korolev joined the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education in 1954, and began a career of educating athletes and coaches. From 1962 to 1974, he lectured at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and became its senior lecturer. He served as the head of the hockey department at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education from 1974 to 1983, and was the head teacher of its school of hockey coaches. From 1983 to 1989, he was the head coach of the football and ice hockey committee of the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports, and was the deputy of the council from 1987 to 1988. Korolev was also connected to both the Soviet Union national ice hockey team and the Soviet Union national junior ice hockey team. ",
"Yuri Korneev\n Yuri Korneev (March 26, 1937 in Moscow, Soviet Union – June 17, 2002), was a Russian basketball player. At a height of 1.98 m (6'6\") tall, he played at the small forward position. He was among the 105 player nominees for the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors list.",
"Vsevolod Bobrov\n Vsevolod Mikhailovich Bobrov (1 December 1922 – 1 July 1979) was a Soviet athlete, who excelled in football, bandy and ice hockey. He is considered one of the best Russians ever in each of those sports. Originally a football player, he played for CDKA Moscow, VVS Moscow, and Spartak Moscow, and represented the Soviet Union internationally at the 1952 Summer Olympics. After he quit football in 1953 he turned to ice hockey, which he had taken up when it was started in the Soviet Union in 1946. He was one of the first ice hockey players in the Soviet Union, and joined CDKA Moscow, playing for them and VVS Moscow before retiring in 1957. A leading scorer in the Soviet League, Bobrov was one ",
"Yuri Petrov\n Yuri Anatolyevich Petrov (Юрий Анатольевич Петров; born July 18, 1974 in Kryvyi Rih) is a former footballer who spent most of his professional career in the Netherlands."
] |
What sport does Albert Cox play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Albert Cox | 3,262,149 | 71 | [
{
"id": "29155558",
"title": "Albert Cox (footballer)",
"text": " Albert Edward Harrison Cox (24 June 1917 in Treeton, Rotherham – April 2003) was a footballer who played as a left-back for Sheffield United and Halifax Town.",
"score": "1.7767161"
},
{
"id": "9000060",
"title": "Albert Lyman Cox",
"text": " Cox was an All-Southern college football end for the North Carolina Tar Heels of the University of North Carolina. He was also a member of the baseball and track teams. At UNC, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.",
"score": "1.750848"
},
{
"id": "5098341",
"title": "Ernie Cox",
"text": " Ernest \"Ernie\" Cox (February 17, 1894 – February 26, 1962), was a star football player in the Canadian Football League. Cox was born in Hamilton, Ontario. He played for eleven seasons for the Hamilton Tigers. He died in his home town of Hamilton, and was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.",
"score": "1.7204996"
},
{
"id": "16244368",
"title": "Albert Prince-Cox",
"text": " Captain Albert James Prince-Cox (8 August 1890 – 26 October 1967) was an English football manager, player and referee, boxer, boxing promoter and a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society. Prince-Cox became the Secretary-manager of Bristol Rovers in 1930. At the time of his appointment the club were struggling financially, but he was credited with turning the situation around through his use of the player transfer market to buy and sell players for a profit. He left The Pirates (a nickname that he introduced, along with the team's blue and white quartered shirts, which are still worn today) in 1936. He then spent two years working as a full-time boxing promoter, before being appointed as manager of Gloucester City in 1938, at which point he was one of the best-known sporting figures in the West of England. He died in late 1967, aged 77, in Bristol.",
"score": "1.7171345"
},
{
"id": "29155559",
"title": "Albert Cox (footballer)",
"text": " Cox joined Sheffield United from amateur side Woodhouse Mill United F.C., and quickly settled into the first team at Bramall Lane. He made his league debut against Blackpool at Bramall Lane on 20 February 1936, in a 1–0 win. In 1936, Sheffield United reached the FA Cup semi-finals, where they met fellow Second Division side Fulham. Regular left-back, Charlie Wilkinson was injured and unavailable to play in the semi-final, so the inexperienced Cox took his place. Cox remained \"cool in defence\" as Fulham were defeated 2–1. Wilkinson recovered from his injury in time for the final and manager, Teddy Davison, \"opted for (Wilkinson's) age and experience\" over Cox. Cox was often described as a 'bungle of energy' on the field of play. His partner at full-back in the late 1930s was Harry Hooper. Although World War II interrupted his career, Cox played on for several seasons after hostilities had ended, and became one of the most consistent left-backs in the Football League. In total he made 267 league appearances for the Blades with 5 goals. He was transferred to Halifax Town during the 1952 close season.",
"score": "1.672548"
},
{
"id": "26231309",
"title": "Abbie Cox",
"text": " Albert Edward \"Abbie\" Cox (July 16, 1902 – May 10, 1985) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. Cox played a total of five games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Maroons, New York Americans, Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Canadiens. He was born in London, Ontario. Cox played junior hockey in Ottawa and Iroquois Falls, winning the Memorial Cup in 1923. Cox graduated to senior hockey in 1923, playing first with the New Haven Eagles and then the Boston Maples. Cox signed with the New York Hockey Club of the USAHA in 1925 but was ruled ineligible to play in amateur play and was suspended for the season. Cox ",
"score": "1.6637602"
},
{
"id": "15954058",
"title": "Bob Cox (ice hockey)",
"text": " Bob Cox (born 30 May 1941, Kimberley, British Columbia), Canada, is a retired professional ice hockey Centre. When playing he stood 5 feet 10 inches and weighed 165 lb. He shot right. Statistically, Cox was one of the best players to ever skate on the Palestra ice.",
"score": "1.6476047"
},
{
"id": "16142879",
"title": "Charlie Cox (footballer, born 1905)",
"text": " William Charles Cox (born 27 November 1901 – 1978) was a footballer who played as a left back, centre half or left half for Southend United and West Ham United in the English Football League. He also played for Glico Works and Ilford.",
"score": "1.622822"
},
{
"id": "13762036",
"title": "Raphael Cox",
"text": " Raphael Cox (born July 7, 1986 in Tacoma, Washington) is an American soccer player who currently plays for the Tacoma Stars in the Major Arena Soccer League, alongside his younger brother Jamael. Off the pitch, RCox is widely known for his ability to stroke his beard and chuckle.",
"score": "1.599206"
},
{
"id": "2133490",
"title": "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1872)",
"text": " Cox was born in Southampton and started playing for the newly formed Southampton St Mary's club in 1892 as an outfield player. He later converted to a goalkeeper and made his first-team debut when he replaced Jack Barrett in an FA Cup match at the Antelope Ground against Reading on 3 November 1894. Cox retained his place for the next cup match against Marlow before being replaced by H. Williamson. Cox made his Southern League debut away to Royal Ordnance on 5 October 1895 before Tom Cain took over as the first-choice 'keeper. Although Cain was preferred for League matches, Cox played in all five FA Cup matches, where the club reached the First Round proper for the second consecutive season, going down 3–2 ",
"score": "1.5833912"
},
{
"id": "26231310",
"title": "Abbie Cox",
"text": " a professional in 1926 with the Springfield Indians, then an affiliate of the New York Rangers. Cox played two seasons with Springfield, then signed with the Montreal Maroons organization. He played one game with the Maroons in the 1929–30 season, but played mostly for the minor league Windsor Bulldogs. Cox would spend the rest of his career mainly in the minor leagues, but played occasional games in the NHL. He played two games in 1933–34 for the Detroit Red Wings, and one for the New York Americans. He played one game in the 1935–36 season for the Montreal Canadiens. Cox retired after the 1936–37 season. Cox continued in hockey as a linesman.",
"score": "1.5814033"
},
{
"id": "32784998",
"title": "Stan Cox",
"text": " Stanley Ernest Walter Cox (15 July 1918 – 27 June 2012) was a British athlete who competed in two Olympic games in 1948 and 1952. Born in Wood Green, England, he served with Royal Air Force in World War II before competing in the 10,000-metre event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Unable to participate in the 1950 British Empire Games, he returned to the Olympics in 1952, although he did not complete his event, the marathon, due to the flu. At the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, he suffered a sunstroke and collapsed within two miles (3 km) of the finish. He retired from running in 1956, but continued to work with UK Athletics for several years and was due to participate in the ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5796034"
},
{
"id": "7336944",
"title": "Ernie Cox (baseball)",
"text": " Ernest Thompson \"Ernie\" Cox (February 19, 1894 – April 29, 1974) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played in one game for the Chicago White Sox on May 5,. He faced six batters, gave up one hit, two walks, and two earned runs for a career ERA of 18.00.",
"score": "1.5685416"
},
{
"id": "5337718",
"title": "Danny Cox (ice hockey)",
"text": " Daniel Smith \"Silent Danny\" Cox (October 12, 1903 — August 8, 1982) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played 321 games in the National Hockey League between 1926 and 1934. He played for the Toronto St. Patricks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Detroit Falcons, and New York Rangers. He spent the last several years of his playing career in the minor leagues, including serving as a player-coach in the Pacific Coast Hockey League, retiring in 1941. He was born in Little Current, Ontario.",
"score": "1.5679567"
},
{
"id": "12548445",
"title": "Nik Cox",
"text": " Cox played football for the Montmorency Football Club in the Northern Football Netball League. He began playing for the Northern Knights in 2019, and had his 2020 season cancelled due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. During his 2019 season with the Knights, he kicked 9 goals from 10 games, and averaged 12.5 disposals and 4.9 marks a game. Cox represented Vic Metro in the 2019 AFL Under 18 Championships. He began training with in late 2019 and early 2020 as part of the NAB AFL Academy.",
"score": "1.5669575"
},
{
"id": "16553386",
"title": "Bill Cox (baseball)",
"text": " Cox played all or part of five seasons in Major League Baseball, from 1936 until 1940, for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Browns. He also officiated at high school and college basketball games and at the Illinois State High School Finals in Champaign, Illinois.",
"score": "1.5608302"
},
{
"id": "2618206",
"title": "Charlie Cox (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Charles Cavendish Stewart Cox (18 February 1873 – 26 August 1947) was an Australian rules footballer who played with St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"score": "1.5547256"
},
{
"id": "30565425",
"title": "Darron Cox",
"text": " Darron Cox (born November 21, 1967) is a former Major League Baseball player. Cox played in fifteen games for the Montreal Expos in the season. He had six hits in twenty-five at-bats, with one home run and two RBIs. Cox attended the University of Oklahoma. In 1987, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League, and returned to the league the following season to play with the Wareham Gatemen. He was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the fifth round of the 1989 amateur draft.",
"score": "1.5535873"
},
{
"id": "5889036",
"title": "Derek Cox (athlete)",
"text": " He represented England in the shot put, long jump and high jump at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver, Canada.",
"score": "1.5530574"
},
{
"id": "12249395",
"title": "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1863)",
"text": " remainder of the season, and he kept clean sheets in wins against Notts County, Derby County and Aston Villa. Cox also played in both FA Cup ties played in February 1889. He played 13 League matches and Burnley finished 9th in the League conceding 62 goals in 22 games, the second worst defence that season. However, Cox did improve the defence. In the opening 9 games, before Cox was signed, Burnley conceded 38 goals from 9 games at a rate of 4.22 goals per game. From Cox making his debut until the end of the season Cox conceded 24 goals in 13 games at a rate of 1.84 goals per game. Cox remained the first choice goalkeeper into the 1889–90 season. The Burnley team suffered several heavy defeats while Cox ",
"score": "1.552204"
}
] | [
"Albert Cox (footballer)\n Albert Edward Harrison Cox (24 June 1917 in Treeton, Rotherham – April 2003) was a footballer who played as a left-back for Sheffield United and Halifax Town.",
"Albert Lyman Cox\n Cox was an All-Southern college football end for the North Carolina Tar Heels of the University of North Carolina. He was also a member of the baseball and track teams. At UNC, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.",
"Ernie Cox\n Ernest \"Ernie\" Cox (February 17, 1894 – February 26, 1962), was a star football player in the Canadian Football League. Cox was born in Hamilton, Ontario. He played for eleven seasons for the Hamilton Tigers. He died in his home town of Hamilton, and was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.",
"Albert Prince-Cox\n Captain Albert James Prince-Cox (8 August 1890 – 26 October 1967) was an English football manager, player and referee, boxer, boxing promoter and a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society. Prince-Cox became the Secretary-manager of Bristol Rovers in 1930. At the time of his appointment the club were struggling financially, but he was credited with turning the situation around through his use of the player transfer market to buy and sell players for a profit. He left The Pirates (a nickname that he introduced, along with the team's blue and white quartered shirts, which are still worn today) in 1936. He then spent two years working as a full-time boxing promoter, before being appointed as manager of Gloucester City in 1938, at which point he was one of the best-known sporting figures in the West of England. He died in late 1967, aged 77, in Bristol.",
"Albert Cox (footballer)\n Cox joined Sheffield United from amateur side Woodhouse Mill United F.C., and quickly settled into the first team at Bramall Lane. He made his league debut against Blackpool at Bramall Lane on 20 February 1936, in a 1–0 win. In 1936, Sheffield United reached the FA Cup semi-finals, where they met fellow Second Division side Fulham. Regular left-back, Charlie Wilkinson was injured and unavailable to play in the semi-final, so the inexperienced Cox took his place. Cox remained \"cool in defence\" as Fulham were defeated 2–1. Wilkinson recovered from his injury in time for the final and manager, Teddy Davison, \"opted for (Wilkinson's) age and experience\" over Cox. Cox was often described as a 'bungle of energy' on the field of play. His partner at full-back in the late 1930s was Harry Hooper. Although World War II interrupted his career, Cox played on for several seasons after hostilities had ended, and became one of the most consistent left-backs in the Football League. In total he made 267 league appearances for the Blades with 5 goals. He was transferred to Halifax Town during the 1952 close season.",
"Abbie Cox\n Albert Edward \"Abbie\" Cox (July 16, 1902 – May 10, 1985) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. Cox played a total of five games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Maroons, New York Americans, Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Canadiens. He was born in London, Ontario. Cox played junior hockey in Ottawa and Iroquois Falls, winning the Memorial Cup in 1923. Cox graduated to senior hockey in 1923, playing first with the New Haven Eagles and then the Boston Maples. Cox signed with the New York Hockey Club of the USAHA in 1925 but was ruled ineligible to play in amateur play and was suspended for the season. Cox ",
"Bob Cox (ice hockey)\n Bob Cox (born 30 May 1941, Kimberley, British Columbia), Canada, is a retired professional ice hockey Centre. When playing he stood 5 feet 10 inches and weighed 165 lb. He shot right. Statistically, Cox was one of the best players to ever skate on the Palestra ice.",
"Charlie Cox (footballer, born 1905)\n William Charles Cox (born 27 November 1901 – 1978) was a footballer who played as a left back, centre half or left half for Southend United and West Ham United in the English Football League. He also played for Glico Works and Ilford.",
"Raphael Cox\n Raphael Cox (born July 7, 1986 in Tacoma, Washington) is an American soccer player who currently plays for the Tacoma Stars in the Major Arena Soccer League, alongside his younger brother Jamael. Off the pitch, RCox is widely known for his ability to stroke his beard and chuckle.",
"Walter Cox (footballer, born 1872)\n Cox was born in Southampton and started playing for the newly formed Southampton St Mary's club in 1892 as an outfield player. He later converted to a goalkeeper and made his first-team debut when he replaced Jack Barrett in an FA Cup match at the Antelope Ground against Reading on 3 November 1894. Cox retained his place for the next cup match against Marlow before being replaced by H. Williamson. Cox made his Southern League debut away to Royal Ordnance on 5 October 1895 before Tom Cain took over as the first-choice 'keeper. Although Cain was preferred for League matches, Cox played in all five FA Cup matches, where the club reached the First Round proper for the second consecutive season, going down 3–2 ",
"Abbie Cox\n a professional in 1926 with the Springfield Indians, then an affiliate of the New York Rangers. Cox played two seasons with Springfield, then signed with the Montreal Maroons organization. He played one game with the Maroons in the 1929–30 season, but played mostly for the minor league Windsor Bulldogs. Cox would spend the rest of his career mainly in the minor leagues, but played occasional games in the NHL. He played two games in 1933–34 for the Detroit Red Wings, and one for the New York Americans. He played one game in the 1935–36 season for the Montreal Canadiens. Cox retired after the 1936–37 season. Cox continued in hockey as a linesman.",
"Stan Cox\n Stanley Ernest Walter Cox (15 July 1918 – 27 June 2012) was a British athlete who competed in two Olympic games in 1948 and 1952. Born in Wood Green, England, he served with Royal Air Force in World War II before competing in the 10,000-metre event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Unable to participate in the 1950 British Empire Games, he returned to the Olympics in 1952, although he did not complete his event, the marathon, due to the flu. At the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, he suffered a sunstroke and collapsed within two miles (3 km) of the finish. He retired from running in 1956, but continued to work with UK Athletics for several years and was due to participate in the ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Ernie Cox (baseball)\n Ernest Thompson \"Ernie\" Cox (February 19, 1894 – April 29, 1974) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played in one game for the Chicago White Sox on May 5,. He faced six batters, gave up one hit, two walks, and two earned runs for a career ERA of 18.00.",
"Danny Cox (ice hockey)\n Daniel Smith \"Silent Danny\" Cox (October 12, 1903 — August 8, 1982) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played 321 games in the National Hockey League between 1926 and 1934. He played for the Toronto St. Patricks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Detroit Falcons, and New York Rangers. He spent the last several years of his playing career in the minor leagues, including serving as a player-coach in the Pacific Coast Hockey League, retiring in 1941. He was born in Little Current, Ontario.",
"Nik Cox\n Cox played football for the Montmorency Football Club in the Northern Football Netball League. He began playing for the Northern Knights in 2019, and had his 2020 season cancelled due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. During his 2019 season with the Knights, he kicked 9 goals from 10 games, and averaged 12.5 disposals and 4.9 marks a game. Cox represented Vic Metro in the 2019 AFL Under 18 Championships. He began training with in late 2019 and early 2020 as part of the NAB AFL Academy.",
"Bill Cox (baseball)\n Cox played all or part of five seasons in Major League Baseball, from 1936 until 1940, for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Browns. He also officiated at high school and college basketball games and at the Illinois State High School Finals in Champaign, Illinois.",
"Charlie Cox (Australian footballer)\n Charles Cavendish Stewart Cox (18 February 1873 – 26 August 1947) was an Australian rules footballer who played with St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"Darron Cox\n Darron Cox (born November 21, 1967) is a former Major League Baseball player. Cox played in fifteen games for the Montreal Expos in the season. He had six hits in twenty-five at-bats, with one home run and two RBIs. Cox attended the University of Oklahoma. In 1987, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League, and returned to the league the following season to play with the Wareham Gatemen. He was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the fifth round of the 1989 amateur draft.",
"Derek Cox (athlete)\n He represented England in the shot put, long jump and high jump at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver, Canada.",
"Walter Cox (footballer, born 1863)\n remainder of the season, and he kept clean sheets in wins against Notts County, Derby County and Aston Villa. Cox also played in both FA Cup ties played in February 1889. He played 13 League matches and Burnley finished 9th in the League conceding 62 goals in 22 games, the second worst defence that season. However, Cox did improve the defence. In the opening 9 games, before Cox was signed, Burnley conceded 38 goals from 9 games at a rate of 4.22 goals per game. From Cox making his debut until the end of the season Cox conceded 24 goals in 13 games at a rate of 1.84 goals per game. Cox remained the first choice goalkeeper into the 1889–90 season. The Burnley team suffered several heavy defeats while Cox "
] |
What sport does Luka Glavaš play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Luka Glavas | 5,034,677 | 98 | [
{
"id": "33040512",
"title": "Luka Glavas",
"text": " Luka Glavas (Luka Glavaš; born 20 January 1985) is a former Australian footballer.",
"score": "1.8217499"
},
{
"id": "33040513",
"title": "Luka Glavas",
"text": " Luka Glavas played for Hurstville Zagreb from 2003 to 2004, Melbourne Knights from 2004 to 2005 and Sydney United from 2005 to 2006. In the 2006 NSW Premier League Grand Final against Blacktown City Demons, Glavas scored all four goals in a 4–0 win for Sydney United. Glavas then joined Perth Glory in mid-2006. Glavas scored his first ever A-League goal against Sydney FC on 29 October 2006. However, he was generally disappointing during his time at Perth Glory. At the end of the 2006–2007 A-League season, Perth advised Glavas that he was one of five players to be released by the club. ",
"score": "1.7941794"
},
{
"id": "11561998",
"title": "Vlatko Glavaš",
"text": " Glavaš started his career at hometown club Iskra Bugojno and played a significant part of his career for clubs in Germany.",
"score": "1.6586375"
},
{
"id": "6277331",
"title": "Glavaš",
"text": "Luka Glavas (1985), Australian-born footballer ; Branimir Glavaš (1956), Croatian former major general and politician ; Marin Glavaš (born 1992), Croatian footballer ; Radoslav Glavaš (senior) (1863-1913), Herzegovinian Croat Franciscan ; Radoslav Glavaš (junior) (1909-1945), Herzegovinian Croat Franciscan ; Stanoje Glavaš (1763-1815), Serbian hajduk and hero ; Vlatko Glavaš (1962), Bosnian footballer Glavaš (Serbian Cyrillic: Главаш) is a Serbian and Croatian family name. People with the surname include:",
"score": "1.6559496"
},
{
"id": "33040514",
"title": "Luka Glavas",
"text": " 13 February 2007, Sydney FC announced Glavas had signed with the club and was included in the squad for the AFC Champions League 2007. Glavas was released by Sydney at the completion of their ACL campaign and signed with Heidelberg United in the Victorian Premier League. In 2008 Glavas returned to Sydney United and returned to goalscoring form in the NSW Premier League. Glavas was Sydney United's top goalscorer in 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2013. The talismanic striker retired on 24 August 2014, playing his last match against Sutherland Sharks in the last round of the 2014 National Premier Leagues NSW.",
"score": "1.6008539"
},
{
"id": "15118014",
"title": "Rory Glaves",
"text": " Rory Glaves (born January 13, 1982 in Niagara Falls, Ontario) is a former professional lacrosse player. Glaves played for the Anaheim Storm, Edmonton Rush and the Rochester Knighthawks of the National Lacrosse League from 2005 to 2013. Glaves also played two years of college lacrosse for the University of Hartford. Glaves has won two Minto Cup championships with the St. Catharines Athletics (2001, 2003) and one Mann Cup championship with the Victoria Shamrocks (2005).",
"score": "1.5721045"
},
{
"id": "32306476",
"title": "Marin Glavaš",
"text": " Glavaš, originally from Imotski, moved to Osijek aged 15. He made his league debut on 6 August 2011 in a 4–0 home win against NK Zagreb, at 19 years of age, coming in for Srđan Vidaković in the 84th minute. He scored his first league goal in the 2–0 home win against Hajduk Split on 24 August 2014. In February 2016, Glavaš joined Ararat Yerevan for their training camp in the United States, joining them permanently on 24 February. In March 2017, Glavaš signed for Finnish second tier club Oulu for the 2017 season. After spending 2 years in Austria playing for four different clubs, Glavaš signed a six month contract with a possibility of a two year extension with Bosnian Premier League club Široki Brijeg on 23 January 2020. He made his official debut for Široki Brijeg in a 3–2 away win against Mladost Doboj Kakanj on 29 February 2020. Glavaš left Široki Brijeg on 10 June 2020 after his contract with the club expired.",
"score": "1.5397141"
},
{
"id": "8839397",
"title": "Karel Klaver",
"text": " Karel Klaver (born September 29, 1978 in Amsterdam, North Holland) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the national squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.",
"score": "1.5390606"
},
{
"id": "32306475",
"title": "Marin Glavaš",
"text": " Marin Glavaš (born 17 March 1992) is a Croatian professional footballer who plays as a winger, currently playing for Krško in the Slovenian Second League.",
"score": "1.5323986"
},
{
"id": "11561999",
"title": "Vlatko Glavaš",
"text": " Glavaš made his debut for Bosnia and Herzegovina in a September 1996 FIFA World Cup qualification match away against Greece and earned a total of six caps, scoring no goals. His final international was a June 1997 World Cup qualification match against Denmark.",
"score": "1.52487"
},
{
"id": "15118015",
"title": "Rory Glaves",
"text": " Glaves played for the St. Catharines Athletics in the OLA Junior A Lacrosse League from 1999 to 2003. He quickly earned a reputation as one of the best defensive players in the game. In 2003, Glaves was given the \"Dean McLeod Award\" for Playoffs M.V.P. He was also awarded the \"John McCauley Award\" for Best Defensive Player two years in a row. During his five-year tenure with the Athletics, Glaves helped lead the team to three straight league championships and two Minto Cups.",
"score": "1.5057421"
},
{
"id": "26227162",
"title": "Luka Berulava",
"text": " Luka Berulava (Лука Берулава; ლუკა ბერულავა, born 27 November 2002) is a Georgian pair skater, currently competing with partner Karina Safina. They are the first Georgian pair team to win a medal on the ISU Junior Grand Prix. With his former partner, Alina Butaeva, he won two medals at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics − bronze in pairs and gold in the team event.",
"score": "1.4991913"
},
{
"id": "11561997",
"title": "Vlatko Glavaš",
"text": " Vlatko Glavaš (born 2 September 1962) is a Bosnian politician who is a member of the House of Representatives. He is a member of the Democratic Front. Glavaš is a former professional football manager and retired player.",
"score": "1.4832577"
},
{
"id": "3339567",
"title": "Luka Lozina",
"text": " Luka Lozina (born 6 January 1995) is a Croatian professional water polo player. He is currently playing for VK Jug. He is 6 ft 7 in (2.00 m) tall and weighs 249 lb (113 kg).",
"score": "1.4771156"
},
{
"id": "13607479",
"title": "Dejan Malinović",
"text": " play, but there are also a lot of positive sides. For example, I got a lot of useful advice for my sports and private life.\" \"But the one player I adore the most is (French international) Jerome Fernandez. He is absolutely amazing, a perfect player, a role model for me, and not only for me.\" After playing for Banja Luka's youth teams, Malinovic turned his way of life to professional handball when he joined RK Izvidjac in Ljubuski in 2009, where he spent three great seasons and won National Championship and Cup in 2013. For Malinović, time spent at this club stands out as the most important in his career:\"I had great coaches, Josip Glavas and Ilija ",
"score": "1.473494"
},
{
"id": "26227164",
"title": "Luka Berulava",
"text": " Berulava began learning to skate in 2005. In 2019, he teamed up with Russia's Alina Butaeva to compete in pair skating. The pair decided to train in Perm, coached by Pavel Sliusarenko and Alexei Menshikov.",
"score": "1.4726019"
},
{
"id": "5004297",
"title": "Petr Čáslava",
"text": " Čáslava has played for the Czech Republic national ice hockey team. He played his first game in the national squad in 2002, and has played 53 times for the national team (as of Jan 3 2009), and played in the 2007 World Championship and 2008 World Championship.",
"score": "1.4518285"
},
{
"id": "30045135",
"title": "Sasha Glavic",
"text": " Sasha Glavic (born May 3, 1983) is a former Canadian football linebacker for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League. He was originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 2006. He played CIS football for the Windsor Lancers. Glavic was also a member of the Saskatchewan Roughriders.",
"score": "1.4502829"
},
{
"id": "13452921",
"title": "Roman Glavatskikh",
"text": " Roman Glavatskikh (born 3 May 1983 in Novoural'sk, USSR) is a Russian futsal player. Forward of the Moscow club Dina Moscow.",
"score": "1.4471276"
},
{
"id": "29308677",
"title": "Aliaksandar Hlavatski",
"text": " Aliaksandar Hlavatski (Аляксандар Главацкі; born 2 May 1970 in Salihorsk) is a former Belarusian athlete who specialized in both long jump and triple jump. His personal best jumps in the two events are 8.33 and 17.53 metres respectively.",
"score": "1.4445225"
}
] | [
"Luka Glavas\n Luka Glavas (Luka Glavaš; born 20 January 1985) is a former Australian footballer.",
"Luka Glavas\n Luka Glavas played for Hurstville Zagreb from 2003 to 2004, Melbourne Knights from 2004 to 2005 and Sydney United from 2005 to 2006. In the 2006 NSW Premier League Grand Final against Blacktown City Demons, Glavas scored all four goals in a 4–0 win for Sydney United. Glavas then joined Perth Glory in mid-2006. Glavas scored his first ever A-League goal against Sydney FC on 29 October 2006. However, he was generally disappointing during his time at Perth Glory. At the end of the 2006–2007 A-League season, Perth advised Glavas that he was one of five players to be released by the club. ",
"Vlatko Glavaš\n Glavaš started his career at hometown club Iskra Bugojno and played a significant part of his career for clubs in Germany.",
"Glavaš\nLuka Glavas (1985), Australian-born footballer ; Branimir Glavaš (1956), Croatian former major general and politician ; Marin Glavaš (born 1992), Croatian footballer ; Radoslav Glavaš (senior) (1863-1913), Herzegovinian Croat Franciscan ; Radoslav Glavaš (junior) (1909-1945), Herzegovinian Croat Franciscan ; Stanoje Glavaš (1763-1815), Serbian hajduk and hero ; Vlatko Glavaš (1962), Bosnian footballer Glavaš (Serbian Cyrillic: Главаш) is a Serbian and Croatian family name. People with the surname include:",
"Luka Glavas\n 13 February 2007, Sydney FC announced Glavas had signed with the club and was included in the squad for the AFC Champions League 2007. Glavas was released by Sydney at the completion of their ACL campaign and signed with Heidelberg United in the Victorian Premier League. In 2008 Glavas returned to Sydney United and returned to goalscoring form in the NSW Premier League. Glavas was Sydney United's top goalscorer in 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2013. The talismanic striker retired on 24 August 2014, playing his last match against Sutherland Sharks in the last round of the 2014 National Premier Leagues NSW.",
"Rory Glaves\n Rory Glaves (born January 13, 1982 in Niagara Falls, Ontario) is a former professional lacrosse player. Glaves played for the Anaheim Storm, Edmonton Rush and the Rochester Knighthawks of the National Lacrosse League from 2005 to 2013. Glaves also played two years of college lacrosse for the University of Hartford. Glaves has won two Minto Cup championships with the St. Catharines Athletics (2001, 2003) and one Mann Cup championship with the Victoria Shamrocks (2005).",
"Marin Glavaš\n Glavaš, originally from Imotski, moved to Osijek aged 15. He made his league debut on 6 August 2011 in a 4–0 home win against NK Zagreb, at 19 years of age, coming in for Srđan Vidaković in the 84th minute. He scored his first league goal in the 2–0 home win against Hajduk Split on 24 August 2014. In February 2016, Glavaš joined Ararat Yerevan for their training camp in the United States, joining them permanently on 24 February. In March 2017, Glavaš signed for Finnish second tier club Oulu for the 2017 season. After spending 2 years in Austria playing for four different clubs, Glavaš signed a six month contract with a possibility of a two year extension with Bosnian Premier League club Široki Brijeg on 23 January 2020. He made his official debut for Široki Brijeg in a 3–2 away win against Mladost Doboj Kakanj on 29 February 2020. Glavaš left Široki Brijeg on 10 June 2020 after his contract with the club expired.",
"Karel Klaver\n Karel Klaver (born September 29, 1978 in Amsterdam, North Holland) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the national squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.",
"Marin Glavaš\n Marin Glavaš (born 17 March 1992) is a Croatian professional footballer who plays as a winger, currently playing for Krško in the Slovenian Second League.",
"Vlatko Glavaš\n Glavaš made his debut for Bosnia and Herzegovina in a September 1996 FIFA World Cup qualification match away against Greece and earned a total of six caps, scoring no goals. His final international was a June 1997 World Cup qualification match against Denmark.",
"Rory Glaves\n Glaves played for the St. Catharines Athletics in the OLA Junior A Lacrosse League from 1999 to 2003. He quickly earned a reputation as one of the best defensive players in the game. In 2003, Glaves was given the \"Dean McLeod Award\" for Playoffs M.V.P. He was also awarded the \"John McCauley Award\" for Best Defensive Player two years in a row. During his five-year tenure with the Athletics, Glaves helped lead the team to three straight league championships and two Minto Cups.",
"Luka Berulava\n Luka Berulava (Лука Берулава; ლუკა ბერულავა, born 27 November 2002) is a Georgian pair skater, currently competing with partner Karina Safina. They are the first Georgian pair team to win a medal on the ISU Junior Grand Prix. With his former partner, Alina Butaeva, he won two medals at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics − bronze in pairs and gold in the team event.",
"Vlatko Glavaš\n Vlatko Glavaš (born 2 September 1962) is a Bosnian politician who is a member of the House of Representatives. He is a member of the Democratic Front. Glavaš is a former professional football manager and retired player.",
"Luka Lozina\n Luka Lozina (born 6 January 1995) is a Croatian professional water polo player. He is currently playing for VK Jug. He is 6 ft 7 in (2.00 m) tall and weighs 249 lb (113 kg).",
"Dejan Malinović\n play, but there are also a lot of positive sides. For example, I got a lot of useful advice for my sports and private life.\" \"But the one player I adore the most is (French international) Jerome Fernandez. He is absolutely amazing, a perfect player, a role model for me, and not only for me.\" After playing for Banja Luka's youth teams, Malinovic turned his way of life to professional handball when he joined RK Izvidjac in Ljubuski in 2009, where he spent three great seasons and won National Championship and Cup in 2013. For Malinović, time spent at this club stands out as the most important in his career:\"I had great coaches, Josip Glavas and Ilija ",
"Luka Berulava\n Berulava began learning to skate in 2005. In 2019, he teamed up with Russia's Alina Butaeva to compete in pair skating. The pair decided to train in Perm, coached by Pavel Sliusarenko and Alexei Menshikov.",
"Petr Čáslava\n Čáslava has played for the Czech Republic national ice hockey team. He played his first game in the national squad in 2002, and has played 53 times for the national team (as of Jan 3 2009), and played in the 2007 World Championship and 2008 World Championship.",
"Sasha Glavic\n Sasha Glavic (born May 3, 1983) is a former Canadian football linebacker for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League. He was originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 2006. He played CIS football for the Windsor Lancers. Glavic was also a member of the Saskatchewan Roughriders.",
"Roman Glavatskikh\n Roman Glavatskikh (born 3 May 1983 in Novoural'sk, USSR) is a Russian futsal player. Forward of the Moscow club Dina Moscow.",
"Aliaksandar Hlavatski\n Aliaksandar Hlavatski (Аляксандар Главацкі; born 2 May 1970 in Salihorsk) is a former Belarusian athlete who specialized in both long jump and triple jump. His personal best jumps in the two events are 8.33 and 17.53 metres respectively."
] |
What sport does Guo Ruilong play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Guo Ruilong | 6,449,648 | 46 | [
{
"id": "13943984",
"title": "Guo Ruilong",
"text": "China national league: 1983 Beijing Team",
"score": "1.8014035"
},
{
"id": "13943980",
"title": "Guo Ruilong",
"text": " Guo Ruilong (born 1 December 1943) is a Chinese football coach and former footballer.",
"score": "1.7636328"
},
{
"id": "310947",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " His uncle is former Liaoning Hunters and Chinese national player Guo Shiqiang; coincidentally, he is also Ailun's coach at Liaoning and with the Chinese national team (the latter as an assistant). Guo is a graduate of Liaoning's Northeastern University.",
"score": "1.6906457"
},
{
"id": "13943981",
"title": "Guo Ruilong",
"text": " Born in Kunming, Guo returned to his hometown Beijing in 1946 after the Second Sino-Japanese War ended. He began his football career for Beijing Team's youth team and later graduated to the senior team in 1965. He became a football coach after his retirement in 1975.",
"score": "1.683671"
},
{
"id": "310937",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " Guo played 49 games for Liaoning with average 34 minutes, 23.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 5.8 assists, and 1.9 steals.",
"score": "1.6638279"
},
{
"id": "1058752",
"title": "Guo Lei",
"text": "2003 National Championships - 1st; ; 2006 National Champions Tournament - 1st; ; 2006 Asian Games - 3rd ",
"score": "1.6529806"
},
{
"id": "4103002",
"title": "Guo Shiqiang",
"text": " Guo started his professional career in 1993, and spent most of his career at the Liaoning Hunters, and was a longtime member of the Chinese national team, appearing with the team at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics, as well as the 2002 FIBA World Championship. He also helped the team win the gold medal at the ABC Championship 2003.",
"score": "1.6428808"
},
{
"id": "310942",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " basketball player at the 2012 Olympic Games where he was a peripheral figure, taking part in three out of the five Chinese losses for 3.3 points and 1 rebound on average. Guo—now entrenched into the senior national team fold—entered the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship with high hopes, as did perennial title-favourite China. Both flattered to deceive, however; though Guo had respectable figures of 8.1 points and 2.3 assists per game, he disappeared along with teammates in important games. He had only 7 points (on 3–11 shooting) against South Korea, Iran and Chinese Taipei against all of whom China lost to finish fifth, the lowest-ever ",
"score": "1.6262572"
},
{
"id": "310926",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " Guo Ailun (born November 14, 1993) is a Chinese professional basketball player for the Liaoning Flying Leopards of the Chinese Basketball Association and the Chinese national team. He is the first Chinese basketball player to sign with Jordan Brand. He is the nephew of former Chinese professional basketball player Guo Shiqiang.",
"score": "1.6156102"
},
{
"id": "537453",
"title": "Guo Youhua",
"text": "2005 National League - 1st; ; 2006 Asian Games - 4th ",
"score": "1.6072955"
},
{
"id": "32658190",
"title": "Guo Jia (softball)",
"text": " Guo Jia (born 24 September 1980 in Xiangtan, Hunan) is a Chinese softball player who competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics. In the 2004 Olympic softball competition she was a member of the Chinese team which finished fourth. Guo was a member of Team China at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"score": "1.6033673"
},
{
"id": "537451",
"title": "Guo Youhua",
"text": " Guo Youhua (born 1983-09-29 in Gansu) is a Chinese baseball player who is a member of Team China at the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5904958"
},
{
"id": "310943",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " for a full-strength side at the tournament. He participated in the 2014 Asian Games with China, scoring only 9 points in the quarterfinal round loss against Japan (an opponent that had never beaten them in Asiad history) as China made an early exit. Eager to impress in the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship played at home, Guo shone, contributing 10.9 points (on 54.8% shooting), 4 assists and 3.2 rebounds per outing in making the tournament's All-Star Five. He earned his first career silverware when China won the title to qualify for the 2016 Olympics. That was helped by his commanding display in the final against ",
"score": "1.5883286"
},
{
"id": "3138815",
"title": "Guo Haowen",
"text": " Guo made his international debut for China at the 2018 FIBA Under-18 Asian Championship, where he led the team in assists. In a game against Indonesia, he logged a double-double with 11 points and 13 assists. Guo averaged 18.7 points, 6.3 rebounds and 5.4 assists per game. The following year, Guo suited up for the Chinese squad at the 2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup, leading the team in all key categories (efficiency, points, rebounds and assists per game). His tournament highlights included a triple-double with 34 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists in a game against Puerto Rico. Guo narrowly missed his second tournament triple-double with 25 points, 9 rebounds and 12 assists in a game against Latvia. He finished the tournament ranking fourth in points per game and third in assists. Guo averaged 20.1 points, 5.7 rebounds and 5.7 assists per game.",
"score": "1.5878496"
},
{
"id": "310941",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " 14.3 points and 3.7 assists whilst drawing 5 fouls per game, on his way to an All-Tournament team selection. In the same age group, Guo participated in the World Championship played in Latvia in June/July 2011, contributing team bests of 15 points and 2.8 assists per game over the tournament. He was cut from the senior side pegged to play in the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship, before disciplinary issues (such as tardiness and attitude problems during the U19 World Championship) led to him being handed a one-year suspension from the senior side. Recalled to the senior side in April 2012, the 18-year-old was the ",
"score": "1.5840217"
},
{
"id": "16534831",
"title": "Guo Xingyuan",
"text": " Guo Xingyuan (, born 20 October 1988 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He has won one gold medal and two silver medals from three Paralympic Games (2008, 2012, and 2016). Like many of his teammates, Guo was a polio victim from Pizhou who attended New Hope Center as a child. That's where coach Heng Xin developed him into a star.",
"score": "1.5741801"
},
{
"id": "3138813",
"title": "Guo Haowen",
"text": " In 2018, Guo joined the Bayi Rockets of Chinese Basketball Association (CBA), becoming the first player who was born in the year 2000 to join the league. As a rookie, he played in 43 games, made six starts, posting an average of 9.1 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 17.6 minutes of action per game for the 2018–19 season. In the 2019–20 season, Guo started in two of 19 games, averaging 10.7 points, 2.9 rebounds and 1.7 assists in 21.7 minutes per game while shooting 37.7 percent from the field. Following Guo's second season, the Rockets withdrew from the league on 20 October 2020.",
"score": "1.5618141"
},
{
"id": "3138812",
"title": "Guo Haowen",
"text": " Guo Haowen (born 31 January 2000) is a Chinese professional basketball player for the Shanghai Sharks of the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). He entered his name for the 2021 NBA draft, but withdrew and returned to the CBA.",
"score": "1.5607727"
},
{
"id": "1748973",
"title": "Guo Yi (footballer)",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.5584707"
},
{
"id": "310945",
"title": "Guo Ailun",
"text": " last minute killed the game. Even so, Guo did not meet people's expectations. His biggest problem stems from the huge ups and downs of his performance. Against Poland, Guo only played 14 minutes because of too many fouls, and he only scored 6 points. Against Venezuela, Guo only got one point, and he was abandoned by Li Nan, the head coach, most of the time in the second half. At the end of the qualifying match against Nigeria, Guo had 2 points, 2 rebounds and 2 assists in 15 minutes. Guo was included in China's squad for the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification.",
"score": "1.5572696"
}
] | [
"Guo Ruilong\nChina national league: 1983 Beijing Team",
"Guo Ruilong\n Guo Ruilong (born 1 December 1943) is a Chinese football coach and former footballer.",
"Guo Ailun\n His uncle is former Liaoning Hunters and Chinese national player Guo Shiqiang; coincidentally, he is also Ailun's coach at Liaoning and with the Chinese national team (the latter as an assistant). Guo is a graduate of Liaoning's Northeastern University.",
"Guo Ruilong\n Born in Kunming, Guo returned to his hometown Beijing in 1946 after the Second Sino-Japanese War ended. He began his football career for Beijing Team's youth team and later graduated to the senior team in 1965. He became a football coach after his retirement in 1975.",
"Guo Ailun\n Guo played 49 games for Liaoning with average 34 minutes, 23.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 5.8 assists, and 1.9 steals.",
"Guo Lei\n2003 National Championships - 1st; ; 2006 National Champions Tournament - 1st; ; 2006 Asian Games - 3rd ",
"Guo Shiqiang\n Guo started his professional career in 1993, and spent most of his career at the Liaoning Hunters, and was a longtime member of the Chinese national team, appearing with the team at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics, as well as the 2002 FIBA World Championship. He also helped the team win the gold medal at the ABC Championship 2003.",
"Guo Ailun\n basketball player at the 2012 Olympic Games where he was a peripheral figure, taking part in three out of the five Chinese losses for 3.3 points and 1 rebound on average. Guo—now entrenched into the senior national team fold—entered the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship with high hopes, as did perennial title-favourite China. Both flattered to deceive, however; though Guo had respectable figures of 8.1 points and 2.3 assists per game, he disappeared along with teammates in important games. He had only 7 points (on 3–11 shooting) against South Korea, Iran and Chinese Taipei against all of whom China lost to finish fifth, the lowest-ever ",
"Guo Ailun\n Guo Ailun (born November 14, 1993) is a Chinese professional basketball player for the Liaoning Flying Leopards of the Chinese Basketball Association and the Chinese national team. He is the first Chinese basketball player to sign with Jordan Brand. He is the nephew of former Chinese professional basketball player Guo Shiqiang.",
"Guo Youhua\n2005 National League - 1st; ; 2006 Asian Games - 4th ",
"Guo Jia (softball)\n Guo Jia (born 24 September 1980 in Xiangtan, Hunan) is a Chinese softball player who competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics. In the 2004 Olympic softball competition she was a member of the Chinese team which finished fourth. Guo was a member of Team China at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"Guo Youhua\n Guo Youhua (born 1983-09-29 in Gansu) is a Chinese baseball player who is a member of Team China at the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"Guo Ailun\n for a full-strength side at the tournament. He participated in the 2014 Asian Games with China, scoring only 9 points in the quarterfinal round loss against Japan (an opponent that had never beaten them in Asiad history) as China made an early exit. Eager to impress in the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship played at home, Guo shone, contributing 10.9 points (on 54.8% shooting), 4 assists and 3.2 rebounds per outing in making the tournament's All-Star Five. He earned his first career silverware when China won the title to qualify for the 2016 Olympics. That was helped by his commanding display in the final against ",
"Guo Haowen\n Guo made his international debut for China at the 2018 FIBA Under-18 Asian Championship, where he led the team in assists. In a game against Indonesia, he logged a double-double with 11 points and 13 assists. Guo averaged 18.7 points, 6.3 rebounds and 5.4 assists per game. The following year, Guo suited up for the Chinese squad at the 2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup, leading the team in all key categories (efficiency, points, rebounds and assists per game). His tournament highlights included a triple-double with 34 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists in a game against Puerto Rico. Guo narrowly missed his second tournament triple-double with 25 points, 9 rebounds and 12 assists in a game against Latvia. He finished the tournament ranking fourth in points per game and third in assists. Guo averaged 20.1 points, 5.7 rebounds and 5.7 assists per game.",
"Guo Ailun\n 14.3 points and 3.7 assists whilst drawing 5 fouls per game, on his way to an All-Tournament team selection. In the same age group, Guo participated in the World Championship played in Latvia in June/July 2011, contributing team bests of 15 points and 2.8 assists per game over the tournament. He was cut from the senior side pegged to play in the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship, before disciplinary issues (such as tardiness and attitude problems during the U19 World Championship) led to him being handed a one-year suspension from the senior side. Recalled to the senior side in April 2012, the 18-year-old was the ",
"Guo Xingyuan\n Guo Xingyuan (, born 20 October 1988 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He has won one gold medal and two silver medals from three Paralympic Games (2008, 2012, and 2016). Like many of his teammates, Guo was a polio victim from Pizhou who attended New Hope Center as a child. That's where coach Heng Xin developed him into a star.",
"Guo Haowen\n In 2018, Guo joined the Bayi Rockets of Chinese Basketball Association (CBA), becoming the first player who was born in the year 2000 to join the league. As a rookie, he played in 43 games, made six starts, posting an average of 9.1 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 17.6 minutes of action per game for the 2018–19 season. In the 2019–20 season, Guo started in two of 19 games, averaging 10.7 points, 2.9 rebounds and 1.7 assists in 21.7 minutes per game while shooting 37.7 percent from the field. Following Guo's second season, the Rockets withdrew from the league on 20 October 2020.",
"Guo Haowen\n Guo Haowen (born 31 January 2000) is a Chinese professional basketball player for the Shanghai Sharks of the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). He entered his name for the 2021 NBA draft, but withdrew and returned to the CBA.",
"Guo Yi (footballer)\n .",
"Guo Ailun\n last minute killed the game. Even so, Guo did not meet people's expectations. His biggest problem stems from the huge ups and downs of his performance. Against Poland, Guo only played 14 minutes because of too many fouls, and he only scored 6 points. Against Venezuela, Guo only got one point, and he was abandoned by Li Nan, the head coach, most of the time in the second half. At the end of the qualifying match against Nigeria, Guo had 2 points, 2 rebounds and 2 assists in 15 minutes. Guo was included in China's squad for the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification."
] |
What sport does Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk | 781,888 | 39 | [
{
"id": "217658",
"title": "Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk",
"text": " Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk (born 26 March 1989) is a Turkish professional footballer who currently plays for Uşakspor.",
"score": "1.8591111"
},
{
"id": "5018930",
"title": "Ömer Güleryüz",
"text": " team in the forward position. He became top goalscorer netting 30 goals in the Turkish Amputee Football League in 2018. Internationally, he took part at the European Amputee Football Championship in 2017 in Turkey and 2021 in Poland. He played at the 2018 Amputee Football World Cup in Mexico. He performed a hat-trick in the group match against Italy, and again another one in the final game against Spain. Güleryüz was awarded the ttiles Top goalscorer and the Most valuable player pf the tournament. Professionally playing for Etinesgut Sports Club in Ankara, Güleryuz sis a student of Physical Education and Sports at Istanbul University.",
"score": "1.6965585"
},
{
"id": "31470439",
"title": "Serhat Güller",
"text": "National team (A): 9 (1992–93); ; Olympic national team: 4 (1991); ; U-21 national team: 5 (1989). He appeared in national team in Sepp Piontek period, against Norway in April 1993 when the team lost the game 3-1; in 0-0 ended San Marino game; and, 0-1 lost Germany game (friendly game). Under Piontek's management the national team was not successful, but after that period could catch a take-off. Among his teammates were Hakan Şükür, Bülent Korkmaz, Aykut Kocaman, and Ünal Karaman and many other famous players of the time. ",
"score": "1.6859983"
},
{
"id": "12607932",
"title": "Sezer Öztürk",
"text": " Öztürk was runner-up in the European Championship with the U-19 national team of Turkey. In 2010, he was called up to the Turkey national team under new coach Guus Hiddink, for preparation in the U.S., but did not earn any caps.",
"score": "1.656419"
},
{
"id": "712800",
"title": "Gaziantep Polis Gücü SK (men's hockey)",
"text": " in Mengen, Bolu Province. In 2008, Gaziantep Polis Gücü played at the Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge IV held on May 8–11 in Moravske Toplice, Slovenia, and placed third. The team qualified for the participation at the 2013 Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge III held on May 17–20 in Bratislava, Slovakia. They became champion of the division defeating the teams from Finland, Denmark and Bulgaria. The team is promoted to one higher division for the next year's championship. Team member Orhun Özel scored 10 of the total 28 goals in four games, and was named Top Scorer of the tournament.",
"score": "1.6564059"
},
{
"id": "32262690",
"title": "Mıgırdiç Mıgıryan",
"text": " During the Olympics, Migiryan managed to play all five sports. However, while competing against famed athlete Jim Thorpe during the Decathlon, Migiryan suffered a wrist injury and was forced to discontinue.",
"score": "1.6480925"
},
{
"id": "32752104",
"title": "Kadri Göktulga",
"text": " Göktulga played 198 matches and scored 6 goals for Fenerbahçe between 1921 and 1931, winning three Istanbul League Championships and the General Harington Cup He played 10 times for the national team, and was a member of Turkey's team at both the 1924 and 1928 Summer Olympics. From 1970 to 1971 he sat on the board of Fenerbahçe.",
"score": "1.644027"
},
{
"id": "14470939",
"title": "Ali Öztürk (table tennis)",
"text": " Ali Öztürk (born April 1, 1993) is a Turkish para table tennis player of class 4 and Paralympian. In 2014, he won the silver medal along with his brother Abdullah Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C5 event at the World Para Table Tennis Championships in Beijing, China. He took the gold medal with his teammates Abdullah Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C4 event at the 2016 Lignano Master Open in Italy. He won the bronze medal in the Team C4–5 event at the 2016 Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil along with Abdullah Öztürk and teammate Nesim Turan.",
"score": "1.6414492"
},
{
"id": "8321329",
"title": "Gülşah Gümüşay",
"text": "Turkish U18 National Team -2005, -2007 ; European Championships U18 -2005 ; Turkish TBBL Semifinals -2006, -2007 ; European Championships U18 in Tenerife (ESP) -2006: 7 games: 13.1ppg, 2.4rpg, 1.7apg, 1.0spg, 2FGP: 50%, 3FGP: 31.6%, FT: 57.1% ; Turkish National Team -2008 ; Turkish TBBL All-Star Game -2008 ; Turkish Cup Finalist -2008 ; European Championships in Latvia -2009: 6 games: 3.5ppg, 1.3rpg ; Turkish U20 National Team -2009 ; European Championships U20 in Gdynia (Poland) -2009: 8 games: 15.8ppg, 5.0rpg, 2.0apg, 1.6spg, FGP: 36.7%, 3PT: 34.5%, FT: 87.5% ",
"score": "1.6271592"
},
{
"id": "32568798",
"title": "Yılmaz Yücetürk",
"text": " Rising through Fenerbahce's youth ranks, Yücetürk played for MKE Ankaragücü and PTT, the previous incarnation of Türk Telekom GSK, during his senior career. One year succeeding his retirement, Yücetürk took over the family business and never thought about a return to football; however, after going to Germany to watch the 1974 World Cup, the former player entered the Cologne Sport University as a superannuated student and got a PhD in football. More than a decade later, Yücetürk was technical director of Fenerbahce and served as coach for Kuşadasıspor, Zeytinburnuspor, and Erzurumspor in his later career. The former midfielder also assumed the role of president of the Turkish Football Federation's Research and Planning Department upon returning to Turkey. In the summer of 2000, Yücetürk took charge of the Eritrea national team upon request as part of a Meridian project for African football development, an idea incubated by FIFA. There, he trained over 100 coaches and organized 5 coaching symposiums. Besides heading the Eritrean men's team, he helped develop the Eritrea women's national football team as well with the Turkish Football Federation covering half his salary. On May 20, 2005, Yücetürk died at the Acıbadem Kozyatağı Hospital in Istanbul.",
"score": "1.626125"
},
{
"id": "31470437",
"title": "Serhat Güller",
"text": " Serhat Güller started his professional player career in İnegölspor in 1987. In 1989, he received the attention of Galatasaray. However, he can be mostly named together with Ankaragücü where he played 5 seasons during which he was capped 9 times to national team.",
"score": "1.6256068"
},
{
"id": "13768041",
"title": "Abdullah Öztürk",
"text": " Abdullah Öztürk (born October 1, 1989) is a Turkish para table tennis player of class 4 and Paralympian. Öztürk represented his country at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, United Kingdom. In 2014, he won the silver medal along with Ali Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C5 event at the World Para Table Tennis Championships in Beijing, China. He took the gold medal with his teammates Ali Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C4 event at the 2016 Lignano Master Open in Italy. He captured the gold medal in the individual C4 event at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He won the bronze medal in the Team C4–5 event of the Paralympics along with his brother Ali Öztürk and teammate Nesim Turan. As of April 2019, Öztürk ranks second in the world list of his disability class. He won the gold medal in the Individual C4 event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics.",
"score": "1.6194775"
},
{
"id": "1493682",
"title": "Mehmet Salim Şatıroğlu",
"text": " Şatıroğlu was born in Istanbul and played his entire career as a Defender for Galatasaray SK. Like many other Galatasaray SK players at that time, he was a student of the Galatasaray High School and started playing football at the Grand Cour of the Galatasaray High School. Şatıroğlu won the Istanbul Football League one times.",
"score": "1.6186638"
},
{
"id": "30891197",
"title": "Öztürk",
"text": "Abdullah Öztürk (born 1989), Turkish para table tennis player ; Akın Öztürk (born 1952), Turkish general ; Ali Öztürk (footballer born 1986), Turkish footballer ; Ali Öztürk (footballer born 1987), Turkish footballer ; Ali Öztürk (para table tennis) (born 1993) ; Ali İsmet Öztürk (born 1964), Turkish aerobatics pilot ; Alim Öztürk (born 1992), Turkish footballer ; Alpaslan Öztürk (born 1993), Turkish footballer ; Atacan Öztürk (born 1982), Turkish footballer ; Aykut Öztürk (born 1987), Turkish footballer ; Beyazıt Öztürk (born 1969), Turkish television personality ; Emre Öztürk (born 1986), German footballer of Turkish origin ; Engin Öztürk (born 1983), Turkish actor ; Erkan Öztürk (born 1983), Turkish-German footballer ; Fadıl Öztürk (born 1955), Kurdish ",
"score": "1.6154733"
},
{
"id": "11370258",
"title": "Sport in Turkey",
"text": " Yeliz Özel from Ankara is a Turkish handballer considered to be one of the world's best playmakers from women's handball of its time.",
"score": "1.6142156"
},
{
"id": "872739",
"title": "Gizem Güreşen",
"text": " He started volleyball in Ankara. He was trained in the infrastructure of VakıfBank Güneş Sigorta.",
"score": "1.6135732"
},
{
"id": "11815390",
"title": "Hikmet Vurgun",
"text": " Vurgun began his sports career as a handball player in İzmir.",
"score": "1.6133281"
},
{
"id": "11793020",
"title": "Özkan Hayırlı",
"text": " Özkan Hayırlı (born May 27, 1984 in İstanbul) is a Turkish volleyball player. He is 200 cm tall and plays as middle blocker. He has been playing for Fenerbahçe SK since 2009 and wears the number 1. He played 85 times for the national team and also played for İstanbul B.Ş.Bld. He studied at Istanbul University. He signed a contract on 27 June 2009.",
"score": "1.610406"
},
{
"id": "2725474",
"title": "Alim Öztürk",
"text": " Born in Alkmaar, Netherlands, to his Turkish parents, Öztürk grew up with three siblings and started playing football when he was nine years old and joining AFC '34 youth team. His parents kept distance from Öztürk playing football. He then joined FC Groningen. In 2011, Öztürk joined Eerste Divisie side SC Cambuur, where he quickly went through to the first team and made his Eerste Divisie debut for Cambuur on 22 January 2012.",
"score": "1.6089063"
},
{
"id": "29445279",
"title": "Mehmet Hacıoğlu",
"text": " Mehmet Hacıoğlu (born 28 November 1959 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria) is a former Turkish soccer player and coach of Fenerbahçe PAF. He started his professional football managing career with Erzurumspor and also managed of Gaziosmanpaşaspor and coached of Çaykur Rizespor and Etimesgut Şekerspor. He was working for Fenerbahçe S.K. from 2004 till 2008. He also coached the football team of Sabanci University enjoying an attacking style of 3-2-3-1-2 formation with center-backs double man-marking plus a sweeper. His son İsmail Hacıoğlu is a famous actor and his daughter Kardelen Hacıoğlu is currently residing in Canada, majoring in sociology and minoring in criminology. He played at defence during his professional career. He played for Fenerbahçe (1980–84), Denizlispor (1984–86), Bakırköyspor (1986–93), Beyoğlu Kapalıçarşıspor (1993) and Gaziosmanpaşaspor (1993–94).",
"score": "1.6079352"
}
] | [
"Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk\n Mehmet Gürkan Öztürk (born 26 March 1989) is a Turkish professional footballer who currently plays for Uşakspor.",
"Ömer Güleryüz\n team in the forward position. He became top goalscorer netting 30 goals in the Turkish Amputee Football League in 2018. Internationally, he took part at the European Amputee Football Championship in 2017 in Turkey and 2021 in Poland. He played at the 2018 Amputee Football World Cup in Mexico. He performed a hat-trick in the group match against Italy, and again another one in the final game against Spain. Güleryüz was awarded the ttiles Top goalscorer and the Most valuable player pf the tournament. Professionally playing for Etinesgut Sports Club in Ankara, Güleryuz sis a student of Physical Education and Sports at Istanbul University.",
"Serhat Güller\nNational team (A): 9 (1992–93); ; Olympic national team: 4 (1991); ; U-21 national team: 5 (1989). He appeared in national team in Sepp Piontek period, against Norway in April 1993 when the team lost the game 3-1; in 0-0 ended San Marino game; and, 0-1 lost Germany game (friendly game). Under Piontek's management the national team was not successful, but after that period could catch a take-off. Among his teammates were Hakan Şükür, Bülent Korkmaz, Aykut Kocaman, and Ünal Karaman and many other famous players of the time. ",
"Sezer Öztürk\n Öztürk was runner-up in the European Championship with the U-19 national team of Turkey. In 2010, he was called up to the Turkey national team under new coach Guus Hiddink, for preparation in the U.S., but did not earn any caps.",
"Gaziantep Polis Gücü SK (men's hockey)\n in Mengen, Bolu Province. In 2008, Gaziantep Polis Gücü played at the Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge IV held on May 8–11 in Moravske Toplice, Slovenia, and placed third. The team qualified for the participation at the 2013 Eurohockey Men’s Club Champions Challenge III held on May 17–20 in Bratislava, Slovakia. They became champion of the division defeating the teams from Finland, Denmark and Bulgaria. The team is promoted to one higher division for the next year's championship. Team member Orhun Özel scored 10 of the total 28 goals in four games, and was named Top Scorer of the tournament.",
"Mıgırdiç Mıgıryan\n During the Olympics, Migiryan managed to play all five sports. However, while competing against famed athlete Jim Thorpe during the Decathlon, Migiryan suffered a wrist injury and was forced to discontinue.",
"Kadri Göktulga\n Göktulga played 198 matches and scored 6 goals for Fenerbahçe between 1921 and 1931, winning three Istanbul League Championships and the General Harington Cup He played 10 times for the national team, and was a member of Turkey's team at both the 1924 and 1928 Summer Olympics. From 1970 to 1971 he sat on the board of Fenerbahçe.",
"Ali Öztürk (table tennis)\n Ali Öztürk (born April 1, 1993) is a Turkish para table tennis player of class 4 and Paralympian. In 2014, he won the silver medal along with his brother Abdullah Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C5 event at the World Para Table Tennis Championships in Beijing, China. He took the gold medal with his teammates Abdullah Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C4 event at the 2016 Lignano Master Open in Italy. He won the bronze medal in the Team C4–5 event at the 2016 Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil along with Abdullah Öztürk and teammate Nesim Turan.",
"Gülşah Gümüşay\nTurkish U18 National Team -2005, -2007 ; European Championships U18 -2005 ; Turkish TBBL Semifinals -2006, -2007 ; European Championships U18 in Tenerife (ESP) -2006: 7 games: 13.1ppg, 2.4rpg, 1.7apg, 1.0spg, 2FGP: 50%, 3FGP: 31.6%, FT: 57.1% ; Turkish National Team -2008 ; Turkish TBBL All-Star Game -2008 ; Turkish Cup Finalist -2008 ; European Championships in Latvia -2009: 6 games: 3.5ppg, 1.3rpg ; Turkish U20 National Team -2009 ; European Championships U20 in Gdynia (Poland) -2009: 8 games: 15.8ppg, 5.0rpg, 2.0apg, 1.6spg, FGP: 36.7%, 3PT: 34.5%, FT: 87.5% ",
"Yılmaz Yücetürk\n Rising through Fenerbahce's youth ranks, Yücetürk played for MKE Ankaragücü and PTT, the previous incarnation of Türk Telekom GSK, during his senior career. One year succeeding his retirement, Yücetürk took over the family business and never thought about a return to football; however, after going to Germany to watch the 1974 World Cup, the former player entered the Cologne Sport University as a superannuated student and got a PhD in football. More than a decade later, Yücetürk was technical director of Fenerbahce and served as coach for Kuşadasıspor, Zeytinburnuspor, and Erzurumspor in his later career. The former midfielder also assumed the role of president of the Turkish Football Federation's Research and Planning Department upon returning to Turkey. In the summer of 2000, Yücetürk took charge of the Eritrea national team upon request as part of a Meridian project for African football development, an idea incubated by FIFA. There, he trained over 100 coaches and organized 5 coaching symposiums. Besides heading the Eritrean men's team, he helped develop the Eritrea women's national football team as well with the Turkish Football Federation covering half his salary. On May 20, 2005, Yücetürk died at the Acıbadem Kozyatağı Hospital in Istanbul.",
"Serhat Güller\n Serhat Güller started his professional player career in İnegölspor in 1987. In 1989, he received the attention of Galatasaray. However, he can be mostly named together with Ankaragücü where he played 5 seasons during which he was capped 9 times to national team.",
"Abdullah Öztürk\n Abdullah Öztürk (born October 1, 1989) is a Turkish para table tennis player of class 4 and Paralympian. Öztürk represented his country at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, United Kingdom. In 2014, he won the silver medal along with Ali Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C5 event at the World Para Table Tennis Championships in Beijing, China. He took the gold medal with his teammates Ali Öztürk and Nesim Turan in the Team C4 event at the 2016 Lignano Master Open in Italy. He captured the gold medal in the individual C4 event at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He won the bronze medal in the Team C4–5 event of the Paralympics along with his brother Ali Öztürk and teammate Nesim Turan. As of April 2019, Öztürk ranks second in the world list of his disability class. He won the gold medal in the Individual C4 event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics.",
"Mehmet Salim Şatıroğlu\n Şatıroğlu was born in Istanbul and played his entire career as a Defender for Galatasaray SK. Like many other Galatasaray SK players at that time, he was a student of the Galatasaray High School and started playing football at the Grand Cour of the Galatasaray High School. Şatıroğlu won the Istanbul Football League one times.",
"Öztürk\nAbdullah Öztürk (born 1989), Turkish para table tennis player ; Akın Öztürk (born 1952), Turkish general ; Ali Öztürk (footballer born 1986), Turkish footballer ; Ali Öztürk (footballer born 1987), Turkish footballer ; Ali Öztürk (para table tennis) (born 1993) ; Ali İsmet Öztürk (born 1964), Turkish aerobatics pilot ; Alim Öztürk (born 1992), Turkish footballer ; Alpaslan Öztürk (born 1993), Turkish footballer ; Atacan Öztürk (born 1982), Turkish footballer ; Aykut Öztürk (born 1987), Turkish footballer ; Beyazıt Öztürk (born 1969), Turkish television personality ; Emre Öztürk (born 1986), German footballer of Turkish origin ; Engin Öztürk (born 1983), Turkish actor ; Erkan Öztürk (born 1983), Turkish-German footballer ; Fadıl Öztürk (born 1955), Kurdish ",
"Sport in Turkey\n Yeliz Özel from Ankara is a Turkish handballer considered to be one of the world's best playmakers from women's handball of its time.",
"Gizem Güreşen\n He started volleyball in Ankara. He was trained in the infrastructure of VakıfBank Güneş Sigorta.",
"Hikmet Vurgun\n Vurgun began his sports career as a handball player in İzmir.",
"Özkan Hayırlı\n Özkan Hayırlı (born May 27, 1984 in İstanbul) is a Turkish volleyball player. He is 200 cm tall and plays as middle blocker. He has been playing for Fenerbahçe SK since 2009 and wears the number 1. He played 85 times for the national team and also played for İstanbul B.Ş.Bld. He studied at Istanbul University. He signed a contract on 27 June 2009.",
"Alim Öztürk\n Born in Alkmaar, Netherlands, to his Turkish parents, Öztürk grew up with three siblings and started playing football when he was nine years old and joining AFC '34 youth team. His parents kept distance from Öztürk playing football. He then joined FC Groningen. In 2011, Öztürk joined Eerste Divisie side SC Cambuur, where he quickly went through to the first team and made his Eerste Divisie debut for Cambuur on 22 January 2012.",
"Mehmet Hacıoğlu\n Mehmet Hacıoğlu (born 28 November 1959 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria) is a former Turkish soccer player and coach of Fenerbahçe PAF. He started his professional football managing career with Erzurumspor and also managed of Gaziosmanpaşaspor and coached of Çaykur Rizespor and Etimesgut Şekerspor. He was working for Fenerbahçe S.K. from 2004 till 2008. He also coached the football team of Sabanci University enjoying an attacking style of 3-2-3-1-2 formation with center-backs double man-marking plus a sweeper. His son İsmail Hacıoğlu is a famous actor and his daughter Kardelen Hacıoğlu is currently residing in Canada, majoring in sociology and minoring in criminology. He played at defence during his professional career. He played for Fenerbahçe (1980–84), Denizlispor (1984–86), Bakırköyspor (1986–93), Beyoğlu Kapalıçarşıspor (1993) and Gaziosmanpaşaspor (1993–94)."
] |
What sport does Nicolaas Cortlever play? | [
"chess",
"International Chess",
"Modern European Chess",
"Western Chess",
"chess game"
] | sport | Nicolaas Cortlever | 466,871 | 93 | [
{
"id": "7387581",
"title": "George Cortlever",
"text": " Johan George Cortlever (4 August 1885 in Amsterdam – 14 April 1972 in Amsterdam) was a Dutch backstroke swimmer and water polo player who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics and in the 1920 Summer Olympics. In 1908, he competed in the 100 metre backstroke competition, but he was eliminated in the first round. He was part of the Dutch water polo team, which finished fourth in the 1908 tournament. Twelve years later he was a member of the Dutch water polo team, which finished sixth in the 1920 tournament.",
"score": "1.7715116"
},
{
"id": "28287769",
"title": "Cortlever",
"text": "Nicolaas Cortlever, (1915–1995), Dutch chess master ; Johan Cortlever, (1885–1972), Dutch swimmer Cortlever is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.6977311"
},
{
"id": "6608309",
"title": "Sander Baart",
"text": " Alexander Baart (born 30 April 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player of Belgian descent who plays as a defender or midfielder for Dutch club Oranje-Rood and the Dutch national team.",
"score": "1.591495"
},
{
"id": "6608319",
"title": "Sander de Wijn",
"text": " Sander Sebastiaan Robert Jan de Wijn (born 2 May 1990) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a defender for Kampong and the Dutch national team. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament winning a silver medal. He also competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5648096"
},
{
"id": "8839405",
"title": "Floris Evers",
"text": " Floris Maarten Alphons Maria Evers (born 26 February 1983 in Tilburg, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was the captain of the team at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He has played in all the top leagues the world of field hockey. After the London Olympics, along with Teun de Noijer, he retired from international hockey. In 2013, he played with the Ranchi Rhinos in the Indian hockey league.",
"score": "1.5517058"
},
{
"id": "6958087",
"title": "Nico Spits",
"text": " Nicolaas Bernard \"Nico\" Spits (born 7 September 1943) is a retired field hockey player from the Netherlands. He competed at the 1964 and 1972 Summer Olympics and finished in seventh and fourth place, respectively. In 1972, he played alongside his younger brother, Frans Spits. He was the Olympic flag bearer for the Netherlands in 1972. Together with his brother he was part of the Dutch team that won the 1973 Men's Hockey World Cup. He is the chairman of Orange All Stars, a club of the former international Dutch athletes who play semiprofessional golf.",
"score": "1.5464983"
},
{
"id": "6713029",
"title": "Maria Verschoor",
"text": " Maria Verschoor (born 22 April 1994) is a Dutch field hockey player. She began playing for HC Hoekschewaard before joining HC Rotterdam. She moved up from junior to senior teams and in 2012 she moved to the Amsterdam Hockey & Bandy Club. Verschoor joined the Netherlands national team when she was nineteen. She took part with her team in the 2016 Summer Olympics where they took silver.",
"score": "1.5420929"
},
{
"id": "29401897",
"title": "Alexander Hendrickx",
"text": " Hendrickx started playing hockey for Royal Antwerp. After having played three seasons for Belgian club Dragons he transferred to the Netherlands to play for Pinoké in Amstelveen. He became the top scorer in the 2020–21 Hoofdklasse with 21 goals.",
"score": "1.5414073"
},
{
"id": "8839407",
"title": "Geert-Jan Derikx",
"text": " Geert-Jan Marie Derikx (born October 31, 1980 in Den Bosch, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The defender made his debut on May 1, 2002 in a friendly match against Germany: 1-1. He plays for Stichtse Cricket en Hockey Club in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), after a long time spell with HC Klein Zwitserland in The Hague. His younger brother Rob is also a member of the Dutch field hockey squad. In the summer of 2007 he moved to Amsterdam.",
"score": "1.5401288"
},
{
"id": "6720806",
"title": "Rogier Hofman",
"text": " Rogier Alexander Hofman (born 5 September 1986) is a Dutch field hockey player. He was part of the Dutch national team for the 2007 World Championships in Mönchengladbach, where the team finished in a disappointing seventh place. He won a silver medal at the 2012 Olympics, placing fourth in 2016. Hofman took up field hockey aged eight. In 2012, together with teammate Tim Jenniskens he launched the Sport Helps foundation, which organises sports events for disabled or seriously ill children.",
"score": "1.5399035"
},
{
"id": "6608311",
"title": "Sander Baart",
"text": " As a junior player, he played for the Belgian national team Boys Under 16 and won the European title with them. Later on, he switched to the Dutch national teams and won European silver and gold medals for the Dutch under-21 team and the silver medal at the Junior World Championship. He played his first official match for the senior Dutch national men's team in 2007 against South Korea. He is the only player to be selected for the Dutch national team without ever having played in the Dutch competition prior to his debut. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed ",
"score": "1.5345621"
},
{
"id": "6608328",
"title": "Mink van der Weerden",
"text": " Mink Alphons Louis van der Weerden (born 19 October 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a defender for German club Rot-Weiss Köln and the Dutch national team. He started playing hockey at HCAS and has since also played for Oranje Zwart and Oranje-Rood. He joined Rot-Weiss Köln in the summer of 2020. Van der Weerden made his debut for the national team in 2010 and has since played in two Olympic Games, two World Cups and three European Championships. He studies physiotherapy.",
"score": "1.5267183"
},
{
"id": "6608310",
"title": "Sander Baart",
"text": " He started playing at the age of 6 at Royal Antwerp HC in Belgium and in his final season with them in 2007 won the Belgian national title. As of the 2007-2008 season he was playing for the Dutch club Oranje Zwart. In 2014, 2015 and 2016 he won 3 consecutive Dutch national titles with his club. And in 2015 he also won the Euro Hockey League with his club. On a club level he also represented the Uttar Pradesh Wizards in the first three seasons of the Hockey India League as well as in 2017. In the European club season of 2017–18, he played for Real Club de Polo de Barcelona. As of the 2017–18 season, he played for Braxgata in the Belgian club competition. In January 2020 it was announced he would return to Eindhoven to play for Oranje Zwart's successor Oranje-Rood in the 2020–21 season.",
"score": "1.5261118"
},
{
"id": "30137632",
"title": "Nicolaas",
"text": "Nicolaas Jan Jerôme Bouvy (1892–1957), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas A.P. de Bree (1944–2016), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas G.M. van den Broek (born 1955), Dutch ice hockey player ; Nicolaas Broekhuijsen (1876–1958), Dutch teacher, inventor of korfball ; Nicolaas Buchly (1910–1965), Dutch track cyclist ; Nicolaas R.J. Buwalda (1890–1970), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas Pieter Claesen (born 1962), Belgian footballer ; Nicolaas Cortlever (1915–1995), Dutch chess master ; Nikolaas Davin (born 1997), Namibian cricketer ; Nicolaas Driebergen (born 1987), Dutch swimmer ; Nicolaas Holzken (born 1983), Dutch kickboxer and boxer ; Nicolaas van Hoorn (1904–1946), Dutch fencer ; Nicolaas Immelman (born 1993), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas Jacobs (born ",
"score": "1.5240669"
},
{
"id": "27681304",
"title": "Nicolai Geertsen",
"text": " Nicolai Kornum Geertsen (born 19 June 1991) is a Danish professional footballer who plays for Helsingør as a defender. A versatile and opportunistic defender, Geertsen has played at different levels in both Denmark and Norway. He has captained Sandnes Ulf and Lyngby.",
"score": "1.5211716"
},
{
"id": "30137633",
"title": "Nicolaas",
"text": " Namibian wrestler ; Nicolaas Janse van Rensburg (born 1994), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas de Jong (1887–1966), Dutch cyclist ; Nicolaas Pieter de Jong (born 1942), Dutch sailor ; Nicolaas Landeweerd (born 1954), Dutch water polo player ; Nicolaas Jacobus Lee (born 1994), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas \"Moos\" Linneman (born 1931), Dutch boxer ; Nicolaas Bernardus Lutkeveld (1916–1997), Dutch javelin thrower ; Nicolaas Johannes Luus (born 1977), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas Meiring (born 1933), South African swimmer ; Nicolaas Johannes Michel (1912–1971), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas Moerloos (1900–1944), Belgian gymnast and weightlifter ; Nicolaas Nederpeld (1886–1969), Dutch fencer ; Nicolaas Jacobus Oosthuizen (born ",
"score": "1.5177763"
},
{
"id": "6608315",
"title": "Bob de Voogd",
"text": " Bob de Voogd (born 16 September 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a midfielder or forward for Belgian club Braxgata. He was included to the national team in 2009 and won a silver medal at the 2012 Olympics, placing fourth in 2016.",
"score": "1.5153338"
},
{
"id": "8839377",
"title": "Guus Vogels",
"text": " Augustinus (\"Guus\") Wilhelmus Johannes Marines Vogels (born March 26, 1975 in Naaldwijk, South Holland) is a Dutch field hockey goalkeeper, who twice won Olympic gold medals with the national squad: at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta and four years later, at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. In 2004 he was the starter and won the silver medal with the Dutch team in Athens. Vogels made his debut in January 1996, at the Olympic Qualifier Tournament in Barcelona, in the match against Belgium: 8–4. He plays for HGC (H.O.C. Gazellen-Combinatie) in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse). Vogels was named Best Goalkeeper at the 2004 Champions Trophy in Lahore, Pakistan. Also Vogels was named the best player in the Hockey World Cup 2010 held at New Delhi.",
"score": "1.5137383"
},
{
"id": "8839332",
"title": "Matthijs Brouwer",
"text": " Matthijs Christian Brouwer (born 1 July 1980 in Raamsdonk, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The striker made his debut on 2 June 2000 in a friendly match against Spain. He played for HC Den Bosch in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), but moved to Oranje Zwart in the summer of 2005. His cousin Ronald also is a member of the Netherlands hockey squad.",
"score": "1.5092325"
},
{
"id": "30530129",
"title": "Tynaarlo",
"text": "Jaap Helder (1907 in Paterswolde – 1998) a sailor, participated in the 1960 Summer Olympics ; Roelof Koops (1909 in Zuidlaren – 2008) a Dutch speed skater who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics ; Paul Matthijs (born 1976 in Paterswolde) a Dutch footballer with over 300 club caps ; Jos Hooiveld (born 1983 in Zeijen) a Dutch footballer with over 300 club caps ; Willemijn Bos (born 1988 in Eelde) is a Dutch field hockey defender, team silver medallist at the 2016 Summer Olympics ",
"score": "1.5060616"
}
] | [
"George Cortlever\n Johan George Cortlever (4 August 1885 in Amsterdam – 14 April 1972 in Amsterdam) was a Dutch backstroke swimmer and water polo player who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics and in the 1920 Summer Olympics. In 1908, he competed in the 100 metre backstroke competition, but he was eliminated in the first round. He was part of the Dutch water polo team, which finished fourth in the 1908 tournament. Twelve years later he was a member of the Dutch water polo team, which finished sixth in the 1920 tournament.",
"Cortlever\nNicolaas Cortlever, (1915–1995), Dutch chess master ; Johan Cortlever, (1885–1972), Dutch swimmer Cortlever is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Sander Baart\n Alexander Baart (born 30 April 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player of Belgian descent who plays as a defender or midfielder for Dutch club Oranje-Rood and the Dutch national team.",
"Sander de Wijn\n Sander Sebastiaan Robert Jan de Wijn (born 2 May 1990) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a defender for Kampong and the Dutch national team. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament winning a silver medal. He also competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"Floris Evers\n Floris Maarten Alphons Maria Evers (born 26 February 1983 in Tilburg, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was the captain of the team at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He has played in all the top leagues the world of field hockey. After the London Olympics, along with Teun de Noijer, he retired from international hockey. In 2013, he played with the Ranchi Rhinos in the Indian hockey league.",
"Nico Spits\n Nicolaas Bernard \"Nico\" Spits (born 7 September 1943) is a retired field hockey player from the Netherlands. He competed at the 1964 and 1972 Summer Olympics and finished in seventh and fourth place, respectively. In 1972, he played alongside his younger brother, Frans Spits. He was the Olympic flag bearer for the Netherlands in 1972. Together with his brother he was part of the Dutch team that won the 1973 Men's Hockey World Cup. He is the chairman of Orange All Stars, a club of the former international Dutch athletes who play semiprofessional golf.",
"Maria Verschoor\n Maria Verschoor (born 22 April 1994) is a Dutch field hockey player. She began playing for HC Hoekschewaard before joining HC Rotterdam. She moved up from junior to senior teams and in 2012 she moved to the Amsterdam Hockey & Bandy Club. Verschoor joined the Netherlands national team when she was nineteen. She took part with her team in the 2016 Summer Olympics where they took silver.",
"Alexander Hendrickx\n Hendrickx started playing hockey for Royal Antwerp. After having played three seasons for Belgian club Dragons he transferred to the Netherlands to play for Pinoké in Amstelveen. He became the top scorer in the 2020–21 Hoofdklasse with 21 goals.",
"Geert-Jan Derikx\n Geert-Jan Marie Derikx (born October 31, 1980 in Den Bosch, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The defender made his debut on May 1, 2002 in a friendly match against Germany: 1-1. He plays for Stichtse Cricket en Hockey Club in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), after a long time spell with HC Klein Zwitserland in The Hague. His younger brother Rob is also a member of the Dutch field hockey squad. In the summer of 2007 he moved to Amsterdam.",
"Rogier Hofman\n Rogier Alexander Hofman (born 5 September 1986) is a Dutch field hockey player. He was part of the Dutch national team for the 2007 World Championships in Mönchengladbach, where the team finished in a disappointing seventh place. He won a silver medal at the 2012 Olympics, placing fourth in 2016. Hofman took up field hockey aged eight. In 2012, together with teammate Tim Jenniskens he launched the Sport Helps foundation, which organises sports events for disabled or seriously ill children.",
"Sander Baart\n As a junior player, he played for the Belgian national team Boys Under 16 and won the European title with them. Later on, he switched to the Dutch national teams and won European silver and gold medals for the Dutch under-21 team and the silver medal at the Junior World Championship. He played his first official match for the senior Dutch national men's team in 2007 against South Korea. He is the only player to be selected for the Dutch national team without ever having played in the Dutch competition prior to his debut. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed ",
"Mink van der Weerden\n Mink Alphons Louis van der Weerden (born 19 October 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a defender for German club Rot-Weiss Köln and the Dutch national team. He started playing hockey at HCAS and has since also played for Oranje Zwart and Oranje-Rood. He joined Rot-Weiss Köln in the summer of 2020. Van der Weerden made his debut for the national team in 2010 and has since played in two Olympic Games, two World Cups and three European Championships. He studies physiotherapy.",
"Sander Baart\n He started playing at the age of 6 at Royal Antwerp HC in Belgium and in his final season with them in 2007 won the Belgian national title. As of the 2007-2008 season he was playing for the Dutch club Oranje Zwart. In 2014, 2015 and 2016 he won 3 consecutive Dutch national titles with his club. And in 2015 he also won the Euro Hockey League with his club. On a club level he also represented the Uttar Pradesh Wizards in the first three seasons of the Hockey India League as well as in 2017. In the European club season of 2017–18, he played for Real Club de Polo de Barcelona. As of the 2017–18 season, he played for Braxgata in the Belgian club competition. In January 2020 it was announced he would return to Eindhoven to play for Oranje Zwart's successor Oranje-Rood in the 2020–21 season.",
"Nicolaas\nNicolaas Jan Jerôme Bouvy (1892–1957), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas A.P. de Bree (1944–2016), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas G.M. van den Broek (born 1955), Dutch ice hockey player ; Nicolaas Broekhuijsen (1876–1958), Dutch teacher, inventor of korfball ; Nicolaas Buchly (1910–1965), Dutch track cyclist ; Nicolaas R.J. Buwalda (1890–1970), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas Pieter Claesen (born 1962), Belgian footballer ; Nicolaas Cortlever (1915–1995), Dutch chess master ; Nikolaas Davin (born 1997), Namibian cricketer ; Nicolaas Driebergen (born 1987), Dutch swimmer ; Nicolaas Holzken (born 1983), Dutch kickboxer and boxer ; Nicolaas van Hoorn (1904–1946), Dutch fencer ; Nicolaas Immelman (born 1993), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas Jacobs (born ",
"Nicolai Geertsen\n Nicolai Kornum Geertsen (born 19 June 1991) is a Danish professional footballer who plays for Helsingør as a defender. A versatile and opportunistic defender, Geertsen has played at different levels in both Denmark and Norway. He has captained Sandnes Ulf and Lyngby.",
"Nicolaas\n Namibian wrestler ; Nicolaas Janse van Rensburg (born 1994), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas de Jong (1887–1966), Dutch cyclist ; Nicolaas Pieter de Jong (born 1942), Dutch sailor ; Nicolaas Landeweerd (born 1954), Dutch water polo player ; Nicolaas Jacobus Lee (born 1994), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas \"Moos\" Linneman (born 1931), Dutch boxer ; Nicolaas Bernardus Lutkeveld (1916–1997), Dutch javelin thrower ; Nicolaas Johannes Luus (born 1977), South African rugby player ; Nicolaas Meiring (born 1933), South African swimmer ; Nicolaas Johannes Michel (1912–1971), Dutch footballer ; Nicolaas Moerloos (1900–1944), Belgian gymnast and weightlifter ; Nicolaas Nederpeld (1886–1969), Dutch fencer ; Nicolaas Jacobus Oosthuizen (born ",
"Bob de Voogd\n Bob de Voogd (born 16 September 1988) is a Dutch field hockey player who plays as a midfielder or forward for Belgian club Braxgata. He was included to the national team in 2009 and won a silver medal at the 2012 Olympics, placing fourth in 2016.",
"Guus Vogels\n Augustinus (\"Guus\") Wilhelmus Johannes Marines Vogels (born March 26, 1975 in Naaldwijk, South Holland) is a Dutch field hockey goalkeeper, who twice won Olympic gold medals with the national squad: at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta and four years later, at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. In 2004 he was the starter and won the silver medal with the Dutch team in Athens. Vogels made his debut in January 1996, at the Olympic Qualifier Tournament in Barcelona, in the match against Belgium: 8–4. He plays for HGC (H.O.C. Gazellen-Combinatie) in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse). Vogels was named Best Goalkeeper at the 2004 Champions Trophy in Lahore, Pakistan. Also Vogels was named the best player in the Hockey World Cup 2010 held at New Delhi.",
"Matthijs Brouwer\n Matthijs Christian Brouwer (born 1 July 1980 in Raamsdonk, North Brabant) is a field hockey player from the Netherlands, who won the silver medal with the Dutch national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The striker made his debut on 2 June 2000 in a friendly match against Spain. He played for HC Den Bosch in the Dutch League (Hoofdklasse), but moved to Oranje Zwart in the summer of 2005. His cousin Ronald also is a member of the Netherlands hockey squad.",
"Tynaarlo\nJaap Helder (1907 in Paterswolde – 1998) a sailor, participated in the 1960 Summer Olympics ; Roelof Koops (1909 in Zuidlaren – 2008) a Dutch speed skater who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics ; Paul Matthijs (born 1976 in Paterswolde) a Dutch footballer with over 300 club caps ; Jos Hooiveld (born 1983 in Zeijen) a Dutch footballer with over 300 club caps ; Willemijn Bos (born 1988 in Eelde) is a Dutch field hockey defender, team silver medallist at the 2016 Summer Olympics "
] |
What sport does Mario Aguilar play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Mario Aguilar (footballer) | 5,085,889 | 83 | [
{
"id": "3150479",
"title": "Mario Aguilar (footballer)",
"text": " A holding midfielder or central defender, Aguilar has played his entire football career for his hometown club Isidro Metapán.",
"score": "1.8706942"
},
{
"id": "3150478",
"title": "Mario Aguilar (footballer)",
"text": " Mario Edgardo Aguilar Posadas (born July 31, 1984 in Metapán) is a Salvadoran footballer who currently plays for Isidro Metapán in the Primera División de Fútbol de El Salvador.",
"score": "1.7475206"
},
{
"id": "3150480",
"title": "Mario Aguilar (footballer)",
"text": " Aguilar made his debut for El Salvador as a late substitute in an October 2008 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Haiti which proved to be his only international up until October 2010.",
"score": "1.7320036"
},
{
"id": "30639080",
"title": "Eduardo Aguilar",
"text": " Eduardo Aguilar Estrada (born 6 December 1976 in Puente Genil, Córdoba) is a field hockey midfielder from Spain. He finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. He made his international senior debut for the national side at the 1997 Champions Trophy in Adelaide, South Australia. Aguilar played club hockey for Atlético San Sebastián.",
"score": "1.7034488"
},
{
"id": "12271377",
"title": "Mario Encarnación",
"text": " Encarnación traveled to Taiwan to play for the Macoto Cobras of the Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL) in the 2005 season. He was a CPBL All-Star and helped lead the team to a first half title.",
"score": "1.6877778"
},
{
"id": "10355722",
"title": "Jesús Aguilar",
"text": " Jesús Alexander Aguilar (born June 30, 1990) is a Venezuelan professional baseball first baseman for the Miami Marlins of Major League Baseball (MLB). He has also played for the Cleveland Indians, Milwaukee Brewers, and Tampa Bay Rays. Aguilar was an All-Star in 2018.",
"score": "1.671478"
},
{
"id": "10355723",
"title": "Jesús Aguilar",
"text": " Aguilar signed with the Cleveland Indians as an amateur free agent in November 2007. He spent his first two seasons with the Dominican Summer League Indians. After splitting 2010 between two minor league teams, he hit 23 home runs during the 2011 season between the Lake County Captains of the Class A Midwest League and the Kinston Indians of the Class A-Advanced Carolina League. In 2011, Aguilar was also on the Carolina Mudcats roster, then an affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. Aguilar and Francisco Lindor represented the Indians in the 2012 All-Star Futures Game. The Indians invited Aguilar to spring training in 2013 as a non-roster invitee. Playing for the Akron Aeros of the Class AA Eastern League in 2013, Aguilar had a .275 batting average, 28 doubles, 16 home runs, and 105 runs batted ",
"score": "1.6637528"
},
{
"id": "26748113",
"title": "Chris Aguila",
"text": " Christopher Louis Aguila (born February 23, 1979) is a former Filipino American Major League Baseball outfielder who currently plays for Fortitudo Baseball Bologna in the Italian Baseball League. He played parts of three seasons in the majors with the Florida Marlins (–) and part of the season with the New York Mets. He plays all three outfield positions.",
"score": "1.642093"
},
{
"id": "7754438",
"title": "Christian Aguilera",
"text": " Growing up, Aguilera did a little bit of taekwondo and was obsessed with fighting and obsessed with boxing. He started playing hockey, as it was the only major sport with fighting allowed. He played hockey for two years at Northwood School in Lake Placid, New York and had ambitions to play college hockey and then NHL, but they didn't pan out.",
"score": "1.6372527"
},
{
"id": "6908780",
"title": "Miguel Aguilar (baseball)",
"text": " Aguilar was selected for the Mexico national baseball team at the 2017 World Baseball Classic.",
"score": "1.6319352"
},
{
"id": "14132143",
"title": "Pablo Aguilar (basketball)",
"text": " Aguilar has also been a member of the senior men's Spain national team. He played at EuroBasket 2013, where he won a bronze medal, and at EuroBasket 2015, where he won a gold medal.",
"score": "1.6153082"
},
{
"id": "12271371",
"title": "Mario Encarnación",
"text": " Mario González Encarnación (September 24, 1975 – October 3, 2005) was a baseball outfielder born in Baní, Dominican Republic. He played for the Colorado Rockies and Chicago Cubs for a brief duration—23 games in and.",
"score": "1.6086917"
},
{
"id": "25303561",
"title": "Francisco Aguilar (footballer, born 1949)",
"text": " Born in Santander, Aguilar started his career with local Racing de Santander, making his senior debut at 19 and helping the Cantabrians achieve promotion to the second division in 1970. The following year, he signed with La Liga powerhouse Real Madrid alongside teammate Santillana, finishing his first season with 31 matches (28 starts) and six goals as the team won the national championship; he added three in only four appearances in the UEFA Cup, but they were eliminated in the second round. Safe for two seasons, Aguilar was regularly used during his spell, winning five leagues and two Spanish Cups – including the double in the 1974–75 campaign – and appearing in 190 competitive games. In the summer of 1979 he joined Sporting de Gijón, playing regularly but only managing to score on six occasions during his spell. Aguilar retired from football in June 1983 at the age of 34, after two years with another club in Madrid, second-tier Rayo Vallecano (12 goals from 36 appearances in his first). Over ten seasons, he amassed top-flight totals of 190 matches and 40 goals.",
"score": "1.6039593"
},
{
"id": "2225078",
"title": "Raul Aguilera",
"text": " Aguilera is the son of Raul Aguilera Sr, a Mexican soccer player who played one season for Orlando Sundogs in the USISL A-League in 1997. While at college, Aguilera studied exercise and sports science.",
"score": "1.6026034"
},
{
"id": "27358487",
"title": "Ronnie Aguilar",
"text": " Ronnie Amir Aguilar Romero (born June 24, 1987) is an American professional basketball player last played in China Hainan Jinxing Basketball Club. Formasa Dreamers in Taiwan. Also for Al-Nweidrat of the Bahraini Premier League. He played college basketball for Colorado State and senior year at Cal State Dominguez Hills.",
"score": "1.5967243"
},
{
"id": "152360",
"title": "Mario Castillo",
"text": " Nicknamed Macora, he started his career at local side Dragón when 18 years of age and later played for Águila, with whom he won 3 league titles. In 1978, he joined the star-studded team of Santiagueño, winning another league title with them, and moved to Alianza in 1984 before returning to Águila to end his career with them.",
"score": "1.5946627"
},
{
"id": "142055",
"title": "Antonio Aguilar (water polo)",
"text": " Antonio Aguilar Chastellain (born 7 April 1960) is a Spanish water polo player. He competed in the 1980 and 1984 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5943319"
},
{
"id": "13199840",
"title": "Carlos Aguilar",
"text": " Carlos Aguilar (born May 25, 1988) is an American soccer player who is currently an assistant coach at San Diego State University.",
"score": "1.5929321"
},
{
"id": "27958693",
"title": "Iñaki Aguilar",
"text": " Iñaki Aguilar Vicente (born 9 September 1983) is a Spanish water polo player who competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics, 2012 Summer Olympics.2012 Summer Olympics. and 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5867262"
},
{
"id": "29520737",
"title": "Pablo Aguilar (footballer, born 1987)",
"text": " Pablo César Aguilar Benítez (born 2 April 1987) is a Paraguayan professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Liga MX club Cruz Azul. From March to July 2017, Aguilar served a ten-match suspension after head-butting a referee.",
"score": "1.5844419"
}
] | [
"Mario Aguilar (footballer)\n A holding midfielder or central defender, Aguilar has played his entire football career for his hometown club Isidro Metapán.",
"Mario Aguilar (footballer)\n Mario Edgardo Aguilar Posadas (born July 31, 1984 in Metapán) is a Salvadoran footballer who currently plays for Isidro Metapán in the Primera División de Fútbol de El Salvador.",
"Mario Aguilar (footballer)\n Aguilar made his debut for El Salvador as a late substitute in an October 2008 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Haiti which proved to be his only international up until October 2010.",
"Eduardo Aguilar\n Eduardo Aguilar Estrada (born 6 December 1976 in Puente Genil, Córdoba) is a field hockey midfielder from Spain. He finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. He made his international senior debut for the national side at the 1997 Champions Trophy in Adelaide, South Australia. Aguilar played club hockey for Atlético San Sebastián.",
"Mario Encarnación\n Encarnación traveled to Taiwan to play for the Macoto Cobras of the Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL) in the 2005 season. He was a CPBL All-Star and helped lead the team to a first half title.",
"Jesús Aguilar\n Jesús Alexander Aguilar (born June 30, 1990) is a Venezuelan professional baseball first baseman for the Miami Marlins of Major League Baseball (MLB). He has also played for the Cleveland Indians, Milwaukee Brewers, and Tampa Bay Rays. Aguilar was an All-Star in 2018.",
"Jesús Aguilar\n Aguilar signed with the Cleveland Indians as an amateur free agent in November 2007. He spent his first two seasons with the Dominican Summer League Indians. After splitting 2010 between two minor league teams, he hit 23 home runs during the 2011 season between the Lake County Captains of the Class A Midwest League and the Kinston Indians of the Class A-Advanced Carolina League. In 2011, Aguilar was also on the Carolina Mudcats roster, then an affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. Aguilar and Francisco Lindor represented the Indians in the 2012 All-Star Futures Game. The Indians invited Aguilar to spring training in 2013 as a non-roster invitee. Playing for the Akron Aeros of the Class AA Eastern League in 2013, Aguilar had a .275 batting average, 28 doubles, 16 home runs, and 105 runs batted ",
"Chris Aguila\n Christopher Louis Aguila (born February 23, 1979) is a former Filipino American Major League Baseball outfielder who currently plays for Fortitudo Baseball Bologna in the Italian Baseball League. He played parts of three seasons in the majors with the Florida Marlins (–) and part of the season with the New York Mets. He plays all three outfield positions.",
"Christian Aguilera\n Growing up, Aguilera did a little bit of taekwondo and was obsessed with fighting and obsessed with boxing. He started playing hockey, as it was the only major sport with fighting allowed. He played hockey for two years at Northwood School in Lake Placid, New York and had ambitions to play college hockey and then NHL, but they didn't pan out.",
"Miguel Aguilar (baseball)\n Aguilar was selected for the Mexico national baseball team at the 2017 World Baseball Classic.",
"Pablo Aguilar (basketball)\n Aguilar has also been a member of the senior men's Spain national team. He played at EuroBasket 2013, where he won a bronze medal, and at EuroBasket 2015, where he won a gold medal.",
"Mario Encarnación\n Mario González Encarnación (September 24, 1975 – October 3, 2005) was a baseball outfielder born in Baní, Dominican Republic. He played for the Colorado Rockies and Chicago Cubs for a brief duration—23 games in and.",
"Francisco Aguilar (footballer, born 1949)\n Born in Santander, Aguilar started his career with local Racing de Santander, making his senior debut at 19 and helping the Cantabrians achieve promotion to the second division in 1970. The following year, he signed with La Liga powerhouse Real Madrid alongside teammate Santillana, finishing his first season with 31 matches (28 starts) and six goals as the team won the national championship; he added three in only four appearances in the UEFA Cup, but they were eliminated in the second round. Safe for two seasons, Aguilar was regularly used during his spell, winning five leagues and two Spanish Cups – including the double in the 1974–75 campaign – and appearing in 190 competitive games. In the summer of 1979 he joined Sporting de Gijón, playing regularly but only managing to score on six occasions during his spell. Aguilar retired from football in June 1983 at the age of 34, after two years with another club in Madrid, second-tier Rayo Vallecano (12 goals from 36 appearances in his first). Over ten seasons, he amassed top-flight totals of 190 matches and 40 goals.",
"Raul Aguilera\n Aguilera is the son of Raul Aguilera Sr, a Mexican soccer player who played one season for Orlando Sundogs in the USISL A-League in 1997. While at college, Aguilera studied exercise and sports science.",
"Ronnie Aguilar\n Ronnie Amir Aguilar Romero (born June 24, 1987) is an American professional basketball player last played in China Hainan Jinxing Basketball Club. Formasa Dreamers in Taiwan. Also for Al-Nweidrat of the Bahraini Premier League. He played college basketball for Colorado State and senior year at Cal State Dominguez Hills.",
"Mario Castillo\n Nicknamed Macora, he started his career at local side Dragón when 18 years of age and later played for Águila, with whom he won 3 league titles. In 1978, he joined the star-studded team of Santiagueño, winning another league title with them, and moved to Alianza in 1984 before returning to Águila to end his career with them.",
"Antonio Aguilar (water polo)\n Antonio Aguilar Chastellain (born 7 April 1960) is a Spanish water polo player. He competed in the 1980 and 1984 Summer Olympics.",
"Carlos Aguilar\n Carlos Aguilar (born May 25, 1988) is an American soccer player who is currently an assistant coach at San Diego State University.",
"Iñaki Aguilar\n Iñaki Aguilar Vicente (born 9 September 1983) is a Spanish water polo player who competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics, 2012 Summer Olympics.2012 Summer Olympics. and 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"Pablo Aguilar (footballer, born 1987)\n Pablo César Aguilar Benítez (born 2 April 1987) is a Paraguayan professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Liga MX club Cruz Azul. From March to July 2017, Aguilar served a ten-match suspension after head-butting a referee."
] |
What sport does Marko Vidović play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Marko Vidović | 5,096,058 | 86 | [
{
"id": "27742460",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " Born in Belgrade, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, Vidović started playing football in the youth teams of FK Partizan. After that, he spent two years with FK Hajduk Beograd until January 2008 where he made his first senior appearances playing in the Serbian First League (2nd tier).",
"score": "1.7712218"
},
{
"id": "27742459",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " Marko Vidović (born on 3 June 1988) is a Montenegrin footballer who plays as a left back.",
"score": "1.7540629"
},
{
"id": "27742464",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " In the season 2012-13 he played in Hungary in top league sides Budapest Honvéd FC and Egri FC.",
"score": "1.7433708"
},
{
"id": "27742461",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " In 2008, he joined FK Budućnost Podgorica in the Montenegrin First League which was coached by Miodrag Ješić. He was part of the squad that won the 2007–08 Montenegrin First League. While playing in Montenegro, he accepted a call to represent Montenegro on international level, having played 5 matches for the Montenegro national under-21 football team.",
"score": "1.7399335"
},
{
"id": "7636904",
"title": "Svetozar Marković (footballer)",
"text": " At the beginning of his youth career, Marković used to play as a defensive midfielder or winger through the categories of Radnik Bijeljina. Coming to Partizan's youth setup, he has adapted as a centre-back. As a player with strong team role effect, Marković has been ordered to lead youth team as a captain. During the match against Javor Ivanjica in March 2018, coach Miroslav Đukić moved him to right-back position, which allowed him to break through the opponent's side and make an assist for a goal. Standing at 6 ft 1⁄2 inches (1.84 m), and being a right-legged footballer, Marković is sometimes compared with Sergio Ramos.",
"score": "1.6594768"
},
{
"id": "8832792",
"title": "Dobrivoje Marković",
"text": " A full Serbia international since its inception, Marković was a member of the team that won the silver medal at the 2012 European Championship. He also participated in the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.6458077"
},
{
"id": "26196135",
"title": "Marko Avramović (water polo)",
"text": " Marko Avramović (Serbian Cyrillic: Марко Аврамовић; born August 24, 1986 in Belgrade, Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian water polo player. He played for Crvena Zvezda. He is also a part of the Serbian National team.",
"score": "1.6457214"
},
{
"id": "8832791",
"title": "Dobrivoje Marković",
"text": " At youth level, Marković was a regular member of the Serbia and Montenegro winning squad at the 2004 European Under-18 Championship. He also helped the nation win the gold medal at the 2005 World Under-19 Championship.",
"score": "1.642036"
},
{
"id": "14082321",
"title": "Marko Martinić",
"text": "Playing for Croatian national team: ; U17 LEN Trophy (2006) - gold ; U18 European Water Polo Championship, Malta (2007) - bronze ; U19 European Water Polo Championship, Istanbul (2008) - fifth place ; U20 European Water Polo Championship, Crete (2009) - gold He started training water polo in HAVK Mladost, club with the most trophies in the world. At the age of 16 he joined Mladost's senior squad and won the Croatian national championship in the season of 2007/2008. In the 2010/2011 season he went on loan to VK Medveščak and ended the season as the fourth best scorer (23 goals) in the Adriatic Water polo League. As the best Medveščak player, in the season 2011/2012 he contributed to the historical success of the club, the Eurocup quarter finals, as he scored 27 goals in the competition. In 2012/2013 season he returned to HAVK Mladost, a season in which they ranked #3 in the Adriatic Water polo League. Having taken Macedonian citizenship in 2012, he played for the national team of Macedonia in qualifying rounds for Olympic Games in London 2012. ",
"score": "1.641475"
},
{
"id": "27742465",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " On July 12, 2013, he was presented as a new player of FK Spartak Subotica along with Stefan Cicmil and signed the contract on July 30. He played with FK Partizani Tirana in the 2015–16 Albanian Superliga. In summer 2016 he returned to Serbia and joined second-level side FK Sinđelić Beograd.",
"score": "1.6376728"
},
{
"id": "27540029",
"title": "Stefan Marković (basketball)",
"text": " first phase of the tournament, Serbia dominated in the toughest Group B with 5-0 record, and then eliminated Finland and Czech Republic in the round of 16 and quarterfinal game, respectively. However, they were stopped in the semifinal game by Lithuania with 67–64, and eventually lost to the host team France in the bronze-medal game with 81–68. Over 9 tournament games, Marković averaged 5.1 points, 1.9 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game on 39.1% shooting from the field. Marković also represented Serbia at the 2016 Summer Olympics where they won the silver medal, after losing to the United States in the final game with 96–66. After the tournament, Marković announced his retirement from the national team.",
"score": "1.6116912"
},
{
"id": "26940601",
"title": "Nikola Marković",
"text": " Marković was a member of the junior national teams of Serbia. He played at the 2007 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship in Spain, where he won the gold medal. He also played at the 2009 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He also played with Serbia at the 2013 Mediterranean Games, where he won a silver medal, and at the 2013 Summer Universiade, where he won a bronze medal.",
"score": "1.6097474"
},
{
"id": "25596868",
"title": "Stevan Marković (footballer)",
"text": " On 22 October 2019 it was announced that Marković had signed with New Zealand club Team Wellington to play in the 2019–20 ISPS Handa Premiership.",
"score": "1.6080253"
},
{
"id": "7409728",
"title": "Marko Savić (basketball)",
"text": " Marko Savić (born June 2, 1987) is a Serbian professional basketball player who is currently ranked world No. 2 in men's individual 3x3 rankings by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA). He plays for Novi Sad Al-Wahda and Serbia men's national 3x3 team.",
"score": "1.6013339"
},
{
"id": "9626092",
"title": "Marko Radulović (water polo)",
"text": " He began playing with youth categories of VK Primorje and made senior club debut at the age of 15. He stayed with the club for two seasons since then. In October 2018, he moved to the Serbian club Vojvodina. In the summer of 2020, he moved to Radnički.",
"score": "1.5992582"
},
{
"id": "4053208",
"title": "Đuro Radović",
"text": " Đuro Radović (born 20 February 1999) is a water polo player for Montenegro. Đuro started playing water polo at PVK Jadran, and he is a member of a first squad since 2014.Considered one of the top left-handed players in the world and is the best young player in the world. Đuro also plays for a senior Montenegro men's national water polo team. He played at 2017 World Aquatics Championships in Budapest and won 5-th place.",
"score": "1.5986253"
},
{
"id": "5694446",
"title": "Saša Vidović",
"text": " Born in Banja Luka, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, during his early career he played in Austria for many years, and in minor Serbian clubs as FK Srem Jakovo and FK Mladost Lukićevo, in January 2004 Saša signed with Serbian top league club FK Zemun, where he will play three and a half seasons. In 2007, after his club was relegated, he signed with a Serbian Superliga club FK Rad. From 2004 until summer 2009, Saša played an impressive 116 top league matches, having scored six goals. His estimated market value in summer 2009 is 250.000 Euros. He can play as comunitarian because holds Austrian passport. In summer 2010, after 3 seasons with Belgrade's Rad, he signed with FK Zemun. In summer 2011 he signed with Canadian Soccer League club Brantford Galaxy but during the following winter he returned to Serbia by joining FK Timok Zaječar playing in the Serbian League East. At the end of the season they won promotion from the Serbian First League however during summer he moved to another First League club, RFK Novi Sad. In 2015, he returned to Canada to sign with his former club Brantford to compete in the 2015 season.",
"score": "1.5966465"
},
{
"id": "7636903",
"title": "Svetozar Marković (footballer)",
"text": " Marković started playing with Serbia national under-16 football team in 2015. He capped mostly matches with the team, scoring a goal in a match against Latvia on 15 May 2016. As a regular member of Serbian under-17 national team, Marković was called in squad for the 2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship by coach Perica Ognjenović. In August 2017, Marković was called into the Serbia 19 squad, for the memorial \"Stevan Vilotić - Ćele\", but failed to make a debut during the tournament. In December 2017, Perica Ognjenović called Marković in Serbian under-18 national team for the tournament in Israel. He made his debut for the team in 1–0 defeat against home team on 11 December same year, and also played against Germany next day. As a coach of the Serbian under-21 level, Goran Đorović included Marković to the squad for competitive matches against Macedonia and Russia in September 2018.",
"score": "1.5952871"
},
{
"id": "27742462",
"title": "Marko Vidović",
"text": " In 2010 Vidović joined Anorthosis Famagusta coached by Slavoljub Muslin. He made his debut against PFC CSKA Moscow in 2010–11 UEFA Europa League playoffs.",
"score": "1.5952697"
},
{
"id": "2719099",
"title": "Marko Vukašinović",
"text": " Marko Vukasinovic (born July 30, 1993) is a Montenegrin male volleyball player. He is part of the Montenegro men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Nafels.",
"score": "1.5951765"
}
] | [
"Marko Vidović\n Born in Belgrade, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, Vidović started playing football in the youth teams of FK Partizan. After that, he spent two years with FK Hajduk Beograd until January 2008 where he made his first senior appearances playing in the Serbian First League (2nd tier).",
"Marko Vidović\n Marko Vidović (born on 3 June 1988) is a Montenegrin footballer who plays as a left back.",
"Marko Vidović\n In the season 2012-13 he played in Hungary in top league sides Budapest Honvéd FC and Egri FC.",
"Marko Vidović\n In 2008, he joined FK Budućnost Podgorica in the Montenegrin First League which was coached by Miodrag Ješić. He was part of the squad that won the 2007–08 Montenegrin First League. While playing in Montenegro, he accepted a call to represent Montenegro on international level, having played 5 matches for the Montenegro national under-21 football team.",
"Svetozar Marković (footballer)\n At the beginning of his youth career, Marković used to play as a defensive midfielder or winger through the categories of Radnik Bijeljina. Coming to Partizan's youth setup, he has adapted as a centre-back. As a player with strong team role effect, Marković has been ordered to lead youth team as a captain. During the match against Javor Ivanjica in March 2018, coach Miroslav Đukić moved him to right-back position, which allowed him to break through the opponent's side and make an assist for a goal. Standing at 6 ft 1⁄2 inches (1.84 m), and being a right-legged footballer, Marković is sometimes compared with Sergio Ramos.",
"Dobrivoje Marković\n A full Serbia international since its inception, Marković was a member of the team that won the silver medal at the 2012 European Championship. He also participated in the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Marko Avramović (water polo)\n Marko Avramović (Serbian Cyrillic: Марко Аврамовић; born August 24, 1986 in Belgrade, Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian water polo player. He played for Crvena Zvezda. He is also a part of the Serbian National team.",
"Dobrivoje Marković\n At youth level, Marković was a regular member of the Serbia and Montenegro winning squad at the 2004 European Under-18 Championship. He also helped the nation win the gold medal at the 2005 World Under-19 Championship.",
"Marko Martinić\nPlaying for Croatian national team: ; U17 LEN Trophy (2006) - gold ; U18 European Water Polo Championship, Malta (2007) - bronze ; U19 European Water Polo Championship, Istanbul (2008) - fifth place ; U20 European Water Polo Championship, Crete (2009) - gold He started training water polo in HAVK Mladost, club with the most trophies in the world. At the age of 16 he joined Mladost's senior squad and won the Croatian national championship in the season of 2007/2008. In the 2010/2011 season he went on loan to VK Medveščak and ended the season as the fourth best scorer (23 goals) in the Adriatic Water polo League. As the best Medveščak player, in the season 2011/2012 he contributed to the historical success of the club, the Eurocup quarter finals, as he scored 27 goals in the competition. In 2012/2013 season he returned to HAVK Mladost, a season in which they ranked #3 in the Adriatic Water polo League. Having taken Macedonian citizenship in 2012, he played for the national team of Macedonia in qualifying rounds for Olympic Games in London 2012. ",
"Marko Vidović\n On July 12, 2013, he was presented as a new player of FK Spartak Subotica along with Stefan Cicmil and signed the contract on July 30. He played with FK Partizani Tirana in the 2015–16 Albanian Superliga. In summer 2016 he returned to Serbia and joined second-level side FK Sinđelić Beograd.",
"Stefan Marković (basketball)\n first phase of the tournament, Serbia dominated in the toughest Group B with 5-0 record, and then eliminated Finland and Czech Republic in the round of 16 and quarterfinal game, respectively. However, they were stopped in the semifinal game by Lithuania with 67–64, and eventually lost to the host team France in the bronze-medal game with 81–68. Over 9 tournament games, Marković averaged 5.1 points, 1.9 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game on 39.1% shooting from the field. Marković also represented Serbia at the 2016 Summer Olympics where they won the silver medal, after losing to the United States in the final game with 96–66. After the tournament, Marković announced his retirement from the national team.",
"Nikola Marković\n Marković was a member of the junior national teams of Serbia. He played at the 2007 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship in Spain, where he won the gold medal. He also played at the 2009 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He also played with Serbia at the 2013 Mediterranean Games, where he won a silver medal, and at the 2013 Summer Universiade, where he won a bronze medal.",
"Stevan Marković (footballer)\n On 22 October 2019 it was announced that Marković had signed with New Zealand club Team Wellington to play in the 2019–20 ISPS Handa Premiership.",
"Marko Savić (basketball)\n Marko Savić (born June 2, 1987) is a Serbian professional basketball player who is currently ranked world No. 2 in men's individual 3x3 rankings by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA). He plays for Novi Sad Al-Wahda and Serbia men's national 3x3 team.",
"Marko Radulović (water polo)\n He began playing with youth categories of VK Primorje and made senior club debut at the age of 15. He stayed with the club for two seasons since then. In October 2018, he moved to the Serbian club Vojvodina. In the summer of 2020, he moved to Radnički.",
"Đuro Radović\n Đuro Radović (born 20 February 1999) is a water polo player for Montenegro. Đuro started playing water polo at PVK Jadran, and he is a member of a first squad since 2014.Considered one of the top left-handed players in the world and is the best young player in the world. Đuro also plays for a senior Montenegro men's national water polo team. He played at 2017 World Aquatics Championships in Budapest and won 5-th place.",
"Saša Vidović\n Born in Banja Luka, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, during his early career he played in Austria for many years, and in minor Serbian clubs as FK Srem Jakovo and FK Mladost Lukićevo, in January 2004 Saša signed with Serbian top league club FK Zemun, where he will play three and a half seasons. In 2007, after his club was relegated, he signed with a Serbian Superliga club FK Rad. From 2004 until summer 2009, Saša played an impressive 116 top league matches, having scored six goals. His estimated market value in summer 2009 is 250.000 Euros. He can play as comunitarian because holds Austrian passport. In summer 2010, after 3 seasons with Belgrade's Rad, he signed with FK Zemun. In summer 2011 he signed with Canadian Soccer League club Brantford Galaxy but during the following winter he returned to Serbia by joining FK Timok Zaječar playing in the Serbian League East. At the end of the season they won promotion from the Serbian First League however during summer he moved to another First League club, RFK Novi Sad. In 2015, he returned to Canada to sign with his former club Brantford to compete in the 2015 season.",
"Svetozar Marković (footballer)\n Marković started playing with Serbia national under-16 football team in 2015. He capped mostly matches with the team, scoring a goal in a match against Latvia on 15 May 2016. As a regular member of Serbian under-17 national team, Marković was called in squad for the 2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship by coach Perica Ognjenović. In August 2017, Marković was called into the Serbia 19 squad, for the memorial \"Stevan Vilotić - Ćele\", but failed to make a debut during the tournament. In December 2017, Perica Ognjenović called Marković in Serbian under-18 national team for the tournament in Israel. He made his debut for the team in 1–0 defeat against home team on 11 December same year, and also played against Germany next day. As a coach of the Serbian under-21 level, Goran Đorović included Marković to the squad for competitive matches against Macedonia and Russia in September 2018.",
"Marko Vidović\n In 2010 Vidović joined Anorthosis Famagusta coached by Slavoljub Muslin. He made his debut against PFC CSKA Moscow in 2010–11 UEFA Europa League playoffs.",
"Marko Vukašinović\n Marko Vukasinovic (born July 30, 1993) is a Montenegrin male volleyball player. He is part of the Montenegro men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Nafels."
] |
What sport does Hwang Byung-ju play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Hwang Byung-ju | 4,520,346 | 30 | [
{
"id": "25672393",
"title": "Hwang Byung-ju",
"text": " Hwang Byung-Ju (born 5 March 1984) is a South Korean footballer. Since 2009, he has played for Daejeon Hydro & Nuclear Power FC. Hwang previously played for Daejeon Citizen in the K-League.",
"score": "1.843076"
},
{
"id": "8037758",
"title": "Hwang Chung-gum",
"text": " Hwang began playing in 2005, in the Taesongsan Sports Club.",
"score": "1.7907221"
},
{
"id": "25601648",
"title": "Hwang Jong-hyun",
"text": " Hwang Jong-Hyun (born 20 May 1975) is a field hockey player from South Korea, who was a member of the Men's National Team that won the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. In the final the Asians were beaten by title holders, the Netherlands, after penalty strokes. He is nicknamed Jonathan, and also competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.",
"score": "1.7727892"
},
{
"id": "8037759",
"title": "Hwang Chung-gum",
"text": " Hwang was one of the two flag bearers for the Unified Korea team at the 2018 Winter Olympics Parade of Nations with Won Yun-jong. Hwang is one of 12 North Korean female ice hockey players chosen to be admitted to the Unified Korea team to accompany South Korean players. Rules set by the International Olympic Committee mandate that for each game, three players of the team must be North Korean. Hwang was picked for all three games against Switzerland, Sweden, and Japan by Sarah Murray, the team's coach.",
"score": "1.723692"
},
{
"id": "5353526",
"title": "Hwang Jung-woon",
"text": " Hwang Jung-woon (born 10 April 1986) is a South Korean badminton player. Hwang who came from Suncheon, graduated from the Dong-a University, and later joined the Samsung Electro-Mechanics team. He was part of the Korean national junior team that won the silver medal at the 2004 Asian Junior Championships in the boys' team event, also won the bronze medal in the singles event. At the same year, he also competed at the World Junior Championships, clinched the silver medal in the mixed team event and a bronze medal in the singles event. Hwang represented his country at the 2006 Asian Games, and helped the team win the men's team silver medal. He also claimed the men's singles title at the 2006 Mongolia Satellite tournament.",
"score": "1.717063"
},
{
"id": "7198492",
"title": "Hwang Woo-jin",
"text": " Hwang Woo-jin (황우진, also Hwang Wu-Jin, born May 8, 1990 in Gwangju) is a modern pentathlete from South Korea. He competed for the modern pentathlon at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, along with his compatriot Jung Jin-hwa.",
"score": "1.7103741"
},
{
"id": "25454403",
"title": "Hwang Eun-ju",
"text": " Hwang Eun-ju (黃銀秋; born 22 June 1987) is a South Korean freestyle wrestler. In 2014, she won one of the bronze medals in the women's freestyle 75 kg event at the 2014 Asian Games held in Incheon, South Korea.",
"score": "1.6704004"
},
{
"id": "2421260",
"title": "Hwang Ji-soo",
"text": " Hwang Ji-Soo (Hangul: 황지수, born March 27, 1981) is retired South Korean footballer who played with K League Classic side Pohang Steelers in South Korea. He served under alternative military duties from 2010 to November 2011.",
"score": "1.6603363"
},
{
"id": "8159662",
"title": "Ju Hyeong-kwang",
"text": " Ju Hyeong-kwang (Hangul: 주형광; born March 1, 1976) is a South Korean baseball coach and former professional baseball pitcher. He played 14 seasons in the KBO League, all for the Lotte Giants. Ju was one of the better starting pitchers of the latter half of the 1990s, winning at least ten games in a season five times in six years. He struck out 221 batters in the 1996 season, second all-time in the KBO. Ju pitched in two Korean Series for the Giants, in 1995 and 1999, with his team coming up short both times. Ju threw and batted left-handed. Ju joined the Giants in 1994 at age 18, immediately making an impact as a starting pitcher, going 11-5 with ",
"score": "1.64966"
},
{
"id": "30651945",
"title": "Hwang Byungki",
"text": " Hwang Byungki (31 May 1936, in Seoul – 31 January 2018) was the foremost South Korean player of the gayageum, a 12-string zither with silk strings. He was also a composer and an authority on sanjo, a form of traditional Korean instrumental music. In 1951, he began playing the gayageum at The National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts in Seoul, where he studied under the renowned gayageum masters Kim Yeong-yun (김영윤), Kim Yun-deok (김윤덕), and Shim Sang-geon (심상건). In 1959 he graduated from Seoul National University School of Law. In 1962, he began composing concert and film music using traditional Korean instruments. He presented the premiere performance of Alan Hovhaness's Symphony no. 16 in South Korea in 1963. In 1964 he traveled around the world to Europe, the United States, Japan, and Southeast Asian countries, giving gayageum performances ",
"score": "1.6489693"
},
{
"id": "8037757",
"title": "Hwang Chung-gum",
"text": " Hwang Chung-gum (born 11 September 1995) is an ice hockey player of North Korea representing the Taesongsan Sports Club.",
"score": "1.648416"
},
{
"id": "27504557",
"title": "Hwang Dong-il",
"text": " Hwang first garnered attention in 2004 when he won the gold medal at the Asian Junior Volleyball Championship as part of the South Korean junior national team. While attending Kyonggi University in 2005, Hwang was called-up to the South Korean U21 national team for the 2005 Junior World Volleyball Championship where his team finished sixth. As a sophomore at Kyonggi University in June 2006, Hwang got called up to the South Korean senior national team and debuted with the national team at the 2006 Asia Challenge Cup, which South Korea won. Hwang was selected fourth overall by the Woori Capital Dream Six in the 2008 V-League Draft and traded to the LIG Greaters in ten days. Hwang became the starting setter for ",
"score": "1.6381177"
},
{
"id": "13656879",
"title": "Hwang Ui-jo",
"text": " On 13 October 2015, Hwang scored his first international goal against Jamaica. Hwang Ui-jo participated in 2018 Asian Games as a wild card for South Korea national under-23 team. On 15 August, Hwang scored three goals in the first group-stage match against Bahrain. On 17 August, Hwang scored his fourth goal against Malaysia. On 23 August, Hwang scored his fifth goal against Iran in the Round of 16. In the quarter-finals, Hwang led South Korea to a 4–3 victory against Uzbekistan with his explosive hat-trick. On 29 August, Hwang added a goal against Vietnam in the semi-final match. With nine goals out of seven matches, his overwhelming performance greatly contributed to the team's gold medal. He was selected as the Korean FA Player of the Year after showing his worth in the Asian Games and J1 League. Hwang scored the winning goal against Australia in a 2019 friendly.",
"score": "1.6345658"
},
{
"id": "9672744",
"title": "Hwang In-beom",
"text": " At the 2018 Asian Games, Hwang played a vital role in South Korea winning the gold medal. As a reward, he was discharged from Asan Mugunghwa less than halfway through his military service and returned to Daejeon Citizen. He made his senior international debut in September 2018, and later that year, he scored his first senior international goal in a 2–2 friendly home draw against Panama on 16 October. At the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, he was selected for the ESPN's Team of the Tournament with his impressive play. He also led South Korea to the 2019 EAFF Championship title with two winning goals, and was named the Most Valuable Player of the championship.",
"score": "1.6341572"
},
{
"id": "9619337",
"title": "Hwang Ho-lyeong",
"text": " Hwang began his playing career with Jeju United in 2007. He was picked as the first player of Jeju United in the draft and it was his first challenge to K-League after he tried to enter European clubs leagues such as Ligue 1, Belgian Pro League, and Major League Soccer.",
"score": "1.6315911"
},
{
"id": "3455015",
"title": "Hwang Kyeong-tae",
"text": " Hwang Kyeong-tae (born August 17, 1996) is South Korean professional baseball infielder who is currently playing for the Doosan Bears of the KBO League. His major position is shortstop, however, he sometimes plays as second baseman or third baseman. He graduated from Daegu Sangwon High School and was selected for the Doosan Bears by a draft in 2016 (2nd draft, 2nd round).",
"score": "1.6289722"
},
{
"id": "1527472",
"title": "Hwang Youn-joo",
"text": " Hwang Youn-joo (born 13 August 1986) is a South Korean female professional volleyball player. She was part of the silver medal winning team at the 2010 Asian Games. She was also part of the South Korea women's national volleyball team at the 2010 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, and 2011 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup. She participated in the 2012 Summer Olympics, when the South Korean team finished 4th after losing the bronze medal match 0-3 to Japan, and the 2016 Summer Olympics, when they finished 5th. At club level, she has played for Suwon Hyundai Engineering & Construction Hillstate since 2010. Prior to that, she had been with Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders since 2005, who were initially based in Cheonan.",
"score": "1.6250448"
},
{
"id": "27504558",
"title": "Hwang Dong-il",
"text": " Greaters in his rookie season, and was named Rookie of the Year after the 2008–09 season. In the beginning of the 2011–12 season, Hwang was traded to the Korean Air Jumbos but served as the backup to starting setter Han Sun-soo for the Jumbos between 2011 and 2014. In 2014, Hwang was once again traded to the Samsung Fire Bluefangs. He was mostly on the bench to serve as a backup setter to You Kwang-woo or to play as the opposite spiker sporadically before franchise setter You Kwang-woo left the Bluefangs as a free agent to sign with the Woori Card Wibee after the 2016–17 season. The following season, Hwang returned as the Bluefangs' starting setter under new coach Shin Jin-sik.",
"score": "1.622091"
},
{
"id": "13656875",
"title": "Hwang Ui-jo",
"text": " Hwang Ui-jo (Hanja:黃義助;, or ; born 28 January 1992) is a South Korean professional footballer who plays as forward for Ligue 1 club Bordeaux and the South Korea national team.",
"score": "1.6162598"
},
{
"id": "27504556",
"title": "Hwang Dong-il",
"text": " Hwang Dong-il (Hangul: 황동일; born April 14, 1986) is a South Korean male volleyball player. On club level he plays for the Daejeon Samsung Fire Bluefangs.",
"score": "1.616151"
}
] | [
"Hwang Byung-ju\n Hwang Byung-Ju (born 5 March 1984) is a South Korean footballer. Since 2009, he has played for Daejeon Hydro & Nuclear Power FC. Hwang previously played for Daejeon Citizen in the K-League.",
"Hwang Chung-gum\n Hwang began playing in 2005, in the Taesongsan Sports Club.",
"Hwang Jong-hyun\n Hwang Jong-Hyun (born 20 May 1975) is a field hockey player from South Korea, who was a member of the Men's National Team that won the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. In the final the Asians were beaten by title holders, the Netherlands, after penalty strokes. He is nicknamed Jonathan, and also competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.",
"Hwang Chung-gum\n Hwang was one of the two flag bearers for the Unified Korea team at the 2018 Winter Olympics Parade of Nations with Won Yun-jong. Hwang is one of 12 North Korean female ice hockey players chosen to be admitted to the Unified Korea team to accompany South Korean players. Rules set by the International Olympic Committee mandate that for each game, three players of the team must be North Korean. Hwang was picked for all three games against Switzerland, Sweden, and Japan by Sarah Murray, the team's coach.",
"Hwang Jung-woon\n Hwang Jung-woon (born 10 April 1986) is a South Korean badminton player. Hwang who came from Suncheon, graduated from the Dong-a University, and later joined the Samsung Electro-Mechanics team. He was part of the Korean national junior team that won the silver medal at the 2004 Asian Junior Championships in the boys' team event, also won the bronze medal in the singles event. At the same year, he also competed at the World Junior Championships, clinched the silver medal in the mixed team event and a bronze medal in the singles event. Hwang represented his country at the 2006 Asian Games, and helped the team win the men's team silver medal. He also claimed the men's singles title at the 2006 Mongolia Satellite tournament.",
"Hwang Woo-jin\n Hwang Woo-jin (황우진, also Hwang Wu-Jin, born May 8, 1990 in Gwangju) is a modern pentathlete from South Korea. He competed for the modern pentathlon at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, along with his compatriot Jung Jin-hwa.",
"Hwang Eun-ju\n Hwang Eun-ju (黃銀秋; born 22 June 1987) is a South Korean freestyle wrestler. In 2014, she won one of the bronze medals in the women's freestyle 75 kg event at the 2014 Asian Games held in Incheon, South Korea.",
"Hwang Ji-soo\n Hwang Ji-Soo (Hangul: 황지수, born March 27, 1981) is retired South Korean footballer who played with K League Classic side Pohang Steelers in South Korea. He served under alternative military duties from 2010 to November 2011.",
"Ju Hyeong-kwang\n Ju Hyeong-kwang (Hangul: 주형광; born March 1, 1976) is a South Korean baseball coach and former professional baseball pitcher. He played 14 seasons in the KBO League, all for the Lotte Giants. Ju was one of the better starting pitchers of the latter half of the 1990s, winning at least ten games in a season five times in six years. He struck out 221 batters in the 1996 season, second all-time in the KBO. Ju pitched in two Korean Series for the Giants, in 1995 and 1999, with his team coming up short both times. Ju threw and batted left-handed. Ju joined the Giants in 1994 at age 18, immediately making an impact as a starting pitcher, going 11-5 with ",
"Hwang Byungki\n Hwang Byungki (31 May 1936, in Seoul – 31 January 2018) was the foremost South Korean player of the gayageum, a 12-string zither with silk strings. He was also a composer and an authority on sanjo, a form of traditional Korean instrumental music. In 1951, he began playing the gayageum at The National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts in Seoul, where he studied under the renowned gayageum masters Kim Yeong-yun (김영윤), Kim Yun-deok (김윤덕), and Shim Sang-geon (심상건). In 1959 he graduated from Seoul National University School of Law. In 1962, he began composing concert and film music using traditional Korean instruments. He presented the premiere performance of Alan Hovhaness's Symphony no. 16 in South Korea in 1963. In 1964 he traveled around the world to Europe, the United States, Japan, and Southeast Asian countries, giving gayageum performances ",
"Hwang Chung-gum\n Hwang Chung-gum (born 11 September 1995) is an ice hockey player of North Korea representing the Taesongsan Sports Club.",
"Hwang Dong-il\n Hwang first garnered attention in 2004 when he won the gold medal at the Asian Junior Volleyball Championship as part of the South Korean junior national team. While attending Kyonggi University in 2005, Hwang was called-up to the South Korean U21 national team for the 2005 Junior World Volleyball Championship where his team finished sixth. As a sophomore at Kyonggi University in June 2006, Hwang got called up to the South Korean senior national team and debuted with the national team at the 2006 Asia Challenge Cup, which South Korea won. Hwang was selected fourth overall by the Woori Capital Dream Six in the 2008 V-League Draft and traded to the LIG Greaters in ten days. Hwang became the starting setter for ",
"Hwang Ui-jo\n On 13 October 2015, Hwang scored his first international goal against Jamaica. Hwang Ui-jo participated in 2018 Asian Games as a wild card for South Korea national under-23 team. On 15 August, Hwang scored three goals in the first group-stage match against Bahrain. On 17 August, Hwang scored his fourth goal against Malaysia. On 23 August, Hwang scored his fifth goal against Iran in the Round of 16. In the quarter-finals, Hwang led South Korea to a 4–3 victory against Uzbekistan with his explosive hat-trick. On 29 August, Hwang added a goal against Vietnam in the semi-final match. With nine goals out of seven matches, his overwhelming performance greatly contributed to the team's gold medal. He was selected as the Korean FA Player of the Year after showing his worth in the Asian Games and J1 League. Hwang scored the winning goal against Australia in a 2019 friendly.",
"Hwang In-beom\n At the 2018 Asian Games, Hwang played a vital role in South Korea winning the gold medal. As a reward, he was discharged from Asan Mugunghwa less than halfway through his military service and returned to Daejeon Citizen. He made his senior international debut in September 2018, and later that year, he scored his first senior international goal in a 2–2 friendly home draw against Panama on 16 October. At the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, he was selected for the ESPN's Team of the Tournament with his impressive play. He also led South Korea to the 2019 EAFF Championship title with two winning goals, and was named the Most Valuable Player of the championship.",
"Hwang Ho-lyeong\n Hwang began his playing career with Jeju United in 2007. He was picked as the first player of Jeju United in the draft and it was his first challenge to K-League after he tried to enter European clubs leagues such as Ligue 1, Belgian Pro League, and Major League Soccer.",
"Hwang Kyeong-tae\n Hwang Kyeong-tae (born August 17, 1996) is South Korean professional baseball infielder who is currently playing for the Doosan Bears of the KBO League. His major position is shortstop, however, he sometimes plays as second baseman or third baseman. He graduated from Daegu Sangwon High School and was selected for the Doosan Bears by a draft in 2016 (2nd draft, 2nd round).",
"Hwang Youn-joo\n Hwang Youn-joo (born 13 August 1986) is a South Korean female professional volleyball player. She was part of the silver medal winning team at the 2010 Asian Games. She was also part of the South Korea women's national volleyball team at the 2010 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, and 2011 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup. She participated in the 2012 Summer Olympics, when the South Korean team finished 4th after losing the bronze medal match 0-3 to Japan, and the 2016 Summer Olympics, when they finished 5th. At club level, she has played for Suwon Hyundai Engineering & Construction Hillstate since 2010. Prior to that, she had been with Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders since 2005, who were initially based in Cheonan.",
"Hwang Dong-il\n Greaters in his rookie season, and was named Rookie of the Year after the 2008–09 season. In the beginning of the 2011–12 season, Hwang was traded to the Korean Air Jumbos but served as the backup to starting setter Han Sun-soo for the Jumbos between 2011 and 2014. In 2014, Hwang was once again traded to the Samsung Fire Bluefangs. He was mostly on the bench to serve as a backup setter to You Kwang-woo or to play as the opposite spiker sporadically before franchise setter You Kwang-woo left the Bluefangs as a free agent to sign with the Woori Card Wibee after the 2016–17 season. The following season, Hwang returned as the Bluefangs' starting setter under new coach Shin Jin-sik.",
"Hwang Ui-jo\n Hwang Ui-jo (Hanja:黃義助;, or ; born 28 January 1992) is a South Korean professional footballer who plays as forward for Ligue 1 club Bordeaux and the South Korea national team.",
"Hwang Dong-il\n Hwang Dong-il (Hangul: 황동일; born April 14, 1986) is a South Korean male volleyball player. On club level he plays for the Daejeon Samsung Fire Bluefangs."
] |
What sport does Mark Smalley play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Mark Smalley | 5,094,181 | 81 | [
{
"id": "5633677",
"title": "Mark Smalley",
"text": " Mark Anthony Smalley (born 2 January 1965) is an English former professional footballer who made 167 appearances in the Football League playing for Nottingham Forest, Birmingham City, Bristol Rovers, Leyton Orient, Mansfield Town and Maidstone United. He played as a central defender.",
"score": "1.877549"
},
{
"id": "5633678",
"title": "Mark Smalley",
"text": " Smalley was born in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire. When he left school in 1981, he joined Nottingham Forest as an apprentice, and turned professional two years later. He made his debut in the First Division on 19 March 1983, coming on as substitute for Kenny Swain in a 2–0 defeat away at Ipswich Town. Smalley played five times altogether for Forest's first team: one substitute appearance in the league in the 1983–84 season, and three games in September 1984 deputising for Paul Hart, one in the UEFA Cup, one in the League, and the third in the League Cup in which he sustained a hip injury. He spent the last few weeks of the 1985–86 season on loan at First Division Birmingham City, where ",
"score": "1.7566373"
},
{
"id": "31633255",
"title": "Mark O'Meley",
"text": " Mark O'Meley (born 22 May 1981) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer of Irish descent who played as a in the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s he also played junior footy for the northern lakes warriors and the Wyong Roos. He also went on to coach the Wyong Roos. An Australian international and New South Wales State of Origin representative forward, he previously played in the National Rugby League for the North Sydney Bears, the ill-fated Northern Eagles, the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs (with whom he won the 2004 NRL premiership) and the Sydney Roosters. O'Meley also played for Hull F.C. in the Super League",
"score": "1.6923676"
},
{
"id": "14624369",
"title": "Paul Smalley",
"text": " Paul Thomas Smalley (born 17 November 1966) is a former English footballer and coach. In July 2020 he was reappointed as the technical director of the Bangladesh Football Federation.",
"score": "1.6738038"
},
{
"id": "27399010",
"title": "Mark Minichiello",
"text": " While attending Westfields Sports High, Minichiello played for the Australian Schoolboys team in 1999.",
"score": "1.6660562"
},
{
"id": "30770323",
"title": "Mark Little (footballer)",
"text": " Mark Daniel Little (born 20 August 1988) is an English professional footballer who plays for Yeovil Town as a defender.",
"score": "1.6245904"
},
{
"id": "9678181",
"title": "Mark Tookey",
"text": " Tookey was born in Paddington, New South Wales and raised in Brisbane, Queensland, playing his junior rugby league for Logan Brothers and Springwood Tigers. In 1994, he represented the Queensland under-17 side.",
"score": "1.6119158"
},
{
"id": "31633256",
"title": "Mark O'Meley",
"text": " O'Meley was born in West Wyalong, New South Wales, Australia. O'Meley played with the Northern Lakes Warriors (previously Munmorah Maulers) on the New South Wales' Central Coast.",
"score": "1.6060121"
},
{
"id": "10292918",
"title": "Mark Small",
"text": " Mark Allen Small (November 12, 1967 - October 22, 2013) was an American professional baseball pitcher. Small played for the Houston Astros of the Major League Baseball (MLB) in. In 16 career games, he had a 0-1 record with a 5.92 ERA. He batted and threw right-handed. Small attended Washington State University, where he played college baseball for the Cougars from 1988–1989. He was drafted by the Astros in the 17th round of the 1989 amateur draft. Small was surrounded by family and friends when he died at 9:30 pm in Edmonds, Washington on October 22, 2013. A cause of death was not reported.",
"score": "1.6046886"
},
{
"id": "28421646",
"title": "Adam Smalley",
"text": " Born in 2001 in Poulton-le-Fylde, Smalley made his karting debut in 2011 at the Trent Valley Kart Club, aged 10. Throughout his 6 year karting campaign, he won titles such as the MSA E Plate Rotax Junior series, and the 2016 Rotax Max Wintercup in the Rotax Max Junior class, beating drivers such as FIA F3 driver László Tóth.",
"score": "1.604353"
},
{
"id": "10175284",
"title": "Deane Smalley",
"text": " Deane Alfie Michael Smalley (born 5 September 1988) is an English professional footballer as a striker who is currently signed to Abbey Hey.",
"score": "1.596106"
},
{
"id": "27796213",
"title": "Mark Little (baseball)",
"text": " Mark Travis Little (born July 11, 1972, in Edwardsville, Illinois) is a former outfielder in Major League Baseball. Little retired after the season, after playing for the Florida Marlins Triple-A affiliate, the Albuquerque Isotopes. He batted and threw right-handed. After playing for the University of Memphis in college, Little was drafted by the Texas Rangers in the 8th round of the amateur draft. Little played four years in the Rangers minor league system, getting as high as Triple-A, before being traded on August 9,, along with Darren Oliver and Fernando Tatís to the St. Louis Cardinals for Royce Clayton and Todd ",
"score": "1.5868297"
},
{
"id": "27399008",
"title": "Mark Minichiello",
"text": " Markus Antonio \"Mark\" Minichiello (born 30 January 1982) is an Italy international rugby league footballer who plays as a forward. He previously played for the Sydney Roosters, South Sydney Rabbitohs and the Gold Coast Titans in the NRL, and Hull F.C. in the Super League. He represented NSW City between 2007 and 2011.",
"score": "1.5851436"
},
{
"id": "15734245",
"title": "Mark McCall",
"text": " McCall (nicknamed \"Smally\") played a Five Nations match against Wales in 1994, and came off the bench to play against England in 1996 as well as Australia later that year. He played four times in 1997; against New Zealand, Canada and twice against Italy. He also played against Scotland and England in the 1998 Five Nations, finishing his career later that year with two matches against South Africa. His entire 13-match career went without him scoring a single point internationally. He scored more than 100 points for his club career. He was forced to retire as a player at the age of 31 due to a prolapsed disc. McCall then coached Ulster and won the Celtic League (now the Pro14) in 2006, with a brief spell at Castres before moving to Saracens.",
"score": "1.5848196"
},
{
"id": "4106475",
"title": "Mark Downey",
"text": " Mark Downey (born 3 July 1996) is an Irish road and track cyclist, who currently rides for French amateur team Côtes d'Armor–Marie Morin–Véranda Rideau. As a junior he competed at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships in the Men's junior time trial and also at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships in the Men's junior time trial. On the track he competed at the 2015 UEC European Track Championships in the points race and team pursuit. He won the gold medal at the 2016–17 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Round 2 in Apeldoorn in the points race. He also won the third round of the World Cup points race held in Cali, Colombia following that event he picked up a silver in the madison with his teammate Felix English. Concluding his 2017 World Cup campaign Downey won the madison in LA round 4 and was overall series winner in the points race.",
"score": "1.5800962"
},
{
"id": "10697112",
"title": "Roy Smalley III",
"text": " Roy Frederick Smalley III (born October 25, 1952) is a former professional baseball shortstop, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1975 through 1987 for the Texas Rangers (1975–76), Minnesota Twins (1976–82; 1985–87), New York Yankees (1982–84), and Chicago White Sox (1984). Smalley was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. His father, Roy Jr. was also an MLB league shortstop, and his uncle, Gene Mauch was a long-time MLB manager and infielder.",
"score": "1.5787716"
},
{
"id": "9678180",
"title": "Mark Tookey",
"text": " Mark Tookey (born 9 March 1977) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990 and 2000s. He played as a in Australia for the South Queensland Crushers and the Parramatta Eels as well as the New Zealand Warriors. Tookey then played in the Super League for the Castleford Tigers (Heritage № 817) and the Harlequins RL.",
"score": "1.5767326"
},
{
"id": "6532071",
"title": "Brendan Markey",
"text": " Brendan Markey (born 19 May 1976, in Dublin) was an Irish soccer player who plays for Bangor Celtic in the Leinster Senior League. A nippy striker, he started his career with Bohemians, where he scored at Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi in a 1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup tie. In December 1995 he was snapped up for £60,000 by Mick McCarthy at Millwall. However his time in London was marred by injury and he did not play a single first team game for the Lions. He was loaned out to Dundalk F.C. in November 1996. He signed for Shamrock Rovers for the 1998-99 League of Ireland season. His only goal came at Oriel Park on 25 February. He then moved to Waterford United where he scored in just one game all season on 27 December 1999, a hat trick against St Pats. There were further spells at Bohemians again, Monaghan United, St Patrick's Athletic, Athlone Town, Newry Town and Glenavon F.C..",
"score": "1.5754282"
},
{
"id": "30770324",
"title": "Mark Little (footballer)",
"text": " Born in Worcester and educated at Nunnery Wood High School, Little began his career as a youth player in Wolves' Academy and played a major role in the side who made it to the last four of the FA Youth Cup in 2005. He signed a three-year professional contract in August 2005 and had become a regular in the reserve side by the end of the 2005–06 season, and featured as an unused substitute for the first team throughout April 2006. He made his first team debut in the League Cup at Chesterfield on 23 August 2006. This was followed by his league debut ",
"score": "1.5728798"
},
{
"id": "8044143",
"title": "Mark Lydon",
"text": " Mark Lydon (born 1985 in Galway) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays Gaelic football and hurling with his local club Moycullen. He has been a member of the Galway senior inter-county team since 2008 and the Galway senior hurling team since 2012.",
"score": "1.5719852"
}
] | [
"Mark Smalley\n Mark Anthony Smalley (born 2 January 1965) is an English former professional footballer who made 167 appearances in the Football League playing for Nottingham Forest, Birmingham City, Bristol Rovers, Leyton Orient, Mansfield Town and Maidstone United. He played as a central defender.",
"Mark Smalley\n Smalley was born in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire. When he left school in 1981, he joined Nottingham Forest as an apprentice, and turned professional two years later. He made his debut in the First Division on 19 March 1983, coming on as substitute for Kenny Swain in a 2–0 defeat away at Ipswich Town. Smalley played five times altogether for Forest's first team: one substitute appearance in the league in the 1983–84 season, and three games in September 1984 deputising for Paul Hart, one in the UEFA Cup, one in the League, and the third in the League Cup in which he sustained a hip injury. He spent the last few weeks of the 1985–86 season on loan at First Division Birmingham City, where ",
"Mark O'Meley\n Mark O'Meley (born 22 May 1981) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer of Irish descent who played as a in the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s he also played junior footy for the northern lakes warriors and the Wyong Roos. He also went on to coach the Wyong Roos. An Australian international and New South Wales State of Origin representative forward, he previously played in the National Rugby League for the North Sydney Bears, the ill-fated Northern Eagles, the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs (with whom he won the 2004 NRL premiership) and the Sydney Roosters. O'Meley also played for Hull F.C. in the Super League",
"Paul Smalley\n Paul Thomas Smalley (born 17 November 1966) is a former English footballer and coach. In July 2020 he was reappointed as the technical director of the Bangladesh Football Federation.",
"Mark Minichiello\n While attending Westfields Sports High, Minichiello played for the Australian Schoolboys team in 1999.",
"Mark Little (footballer)\n Mark Daniel Little (born 20 August 1988) is an English professional footballer who plays for Yeovil Town as a defender.",
"Mark Tookey\n Tookey was born in Paddington, New South Wales and raised in Brisbane, Queensland, playing his junior rugby league for Logan Brothers and Springwood Tigers. In 1994, he represented the Queensland under-17 side.",
"Mark O'Meley\n O'Meley was born in West Wyalong, New South Wales, Australia. O'Meley played with the Northern Lakes Warriors (previously Munmorah Maulers) on the New South Wales' Central Coast.",
"Mark Small\n Mark Allen Small (November 12, 1967 - October 22, 2013) was an American professional baseball pitcher. Small played for the Houston Astros of the Major League Baseball (MLB) in. In 16 career games, he had a 0-1 record with a 5.92 ERA. He batted and threw right-handed. Small attended Washington State University, where he played college baseball for the Cougars from 1988–1989. He was drafted by the Astros in the 17th round of the 1989 amateur draft. Small was surrounded by family and friends when he died at 9:30 pm in Edmonds, Washington on October 22, 2013. A cause of death was not reported.",
"Adam Smalley\n Born in 2001 in Poulton-le-Fylde, Smalley made his karting debut in 2011 at the Trent Valley Kart Club, aged 10. Throughout his 6 year karting campaign, he won titles such as the MSA E Plate Rotax Junior series, and the 2016 Rotax Max Wintercup in the Rotax Max Junior class, beating drivers such as FIA F3 driver László Tóth.",
"Deane Smalley\n Deane Alfie Michael Smalley (born 5 September 1988) is an English professional footballer as a striker who is currently signed to Abbey Hey.",
"Mark Little (baseball)\n Mark Travis Little (born July 11, 1972, in Edwardsville, Illinois) is a former outfielder in Major League Baseball. Little retired after the season, after playing for the Florida Marlins Triple-A affiliate, the Albuquerque Isotopes. He batted and threw right-handed. After playing for the University of Memphis in college, Little was drafted by the Texas Rangers in the 8th round of the amateur draft. Little played four years in the Rangers minor league system, getting as high as Triple-A, before being traded on August 9,, along with Darren Oliver and Fernando Tatís to the St. Louis Cardinals for Royce Clayton and Todd ",
"Mark Minichiello\n Markus Antonio \"Mark\" Minichiello (born 30 January 1982) is an Italy international rugby league footballer who plays as a forward. He previously played for the Sydney Roosters, South Sydney Rabbitohs and the Gold Coast Titans in the NRL, and Hull F.C. in the Super League. He represented NSW City between 2007 and 2011.",
"Mark McCall\n McCall (nicknamed \"Smally\") played a Five Nations match against Wales in 1994, and came off the bench to play against England in 1996 as well as Australia later that year. He played four times in 1997; against New Zealand, Canada and twice against Italy. He also played against Scotland and England in the 1998 Five Nations, finishing his career later that year with two matches against South Africa. His entire 13-match career went without him scoring a single point internationally. He scored more than 100 points for his club career. He was forced to retire as a player at the age of 31 due to a prolapsed disc. McCall then coached Ulster and won the Celtic League (now the Pro14) in 2006, with a brief spell at Castres before moving to Saracens.",
"Mark Downey\n Mark Downey (born 3 July 1996) is an Irish road and track cyclist, who currently rides for French amateur team Côtes d'Armor–Marie Morin–Véranda Rideau. As a junior he competed at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships in the Men's junior time trial and also at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships in the Men's junior time trial. On the track he competed at the 2015 UEC European Track Championships in the points race and team pursuit. He won the gold medal at the 2016–17 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Round 2 in Apeldoorn in the points race. He also won the third round of the World Cup points race held in Cali, Colombia following that event he picked up a silver in the madison with his teammate Felix English. Concluding his 2017 World Cup campaign Downey won the madison in LA round 4 and was overall series winner in the points race.",
"Roy Smalley III\n Roy Frederick Smalley III (born October 25, 1952) is a former professional baseball shortstop, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1975 through 1987 for the Texas Rangers (1975–76), Minnesota Twins (1976–82; 1985–87), New York Yankees (1982–84), and Chicago White Sox (1984). Smalley was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. His father, Roy Jr. was also an MLB league shortstop, and his uncle, Gene Mauch was a long-time MLB manager and infielder.",
"Mark Tookey\n Mark Tookey (born 9 March 1977) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990 and 2000s. He played as a in Australia for the South Queensland Crushers and the Parramatta Eels as well as the New Zealand Warriors. Tookey then played in the Super League for the Castleford Tigers (Heritage № 817) and the Harlequins RL.",
"Brendan Markey\n Brendan Markey (born 19 May 1976, in Dublin) was an Irish soccer player who plays for Bangor Celtic in the Leinster Senior League. A nippy striker, he started his career with Bohemians, where he scored at Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi in a 1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup tie. In December 1995 he was snapped up for £60,000 by Mick McCarthy at Millwall. However his time in London was marred by injury and he did not play a single first team game for the Lions. He was loaned out to Dundalk F.C. in November 1996. He signed for Shamrock Rovers for the 1998-99 League of Ireland season. His only goal came at Oriel Park on 25 February. He then moved to Waterford United where he scored in just one game all season on 27 December 1999, a hat trick against St Pats. There were further spells at Bohemians again, Monaghan United, St Patrick's Athletic, Athlone Town, Newry Town and Glenavon F.C..",
"Mark Little (footballer)\n Born in Worcester and educated at Nunnery Wood High School, Little began his career as a youth player in Wolves' Academy and played a major role in the side who made it to the last four of the FA Youth Cup in 2005. He signed a three-year professional contract in August 2005 and had become a regular in the reserve side by the end of the 2005–06 season, and featured as an unused substitute for the first team throughout April 2006. He made his first team debut in the League Cup at Chesterfield on 23 August 2006. This was followed by his league debut ",
"Mark Lydon\n Mark Lydon (born 1985 in Galway) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays Gaelic football and hurling with his local club Moycullen. He has been a member of the Galway senior inter-county team since 2008 and the Galway senior hurling team since 2012."
] |
What sport does Michal Vacek play? | [
"bobsleigh",
"bobsledding",
"bobsled",
"bobsleighing",
"Bobsled"
] | sport | Michal Vacek | 1,054,383 | 36 | [
{
"id": "1055294",
"title": "Michal Vacek",
"text": " Michal Vacek (born March 10, 1987 in Prague) is a Czech bobsledder. Vacek competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics for the Czech Republic. He teamed with driver Jan Vrba in the two-man event, finishing 24th, and with Vrba, Dominik Dvořák and Dominik Suchý in the four-man event, finishing 16th. As of April 2014, his best showing at the World Championships is 12th, in the 2013 four-man event. Vacek made his World Cup debut in November 2012. As of April 2014, his best finish is 5th, in a four-man event in 2012-13 at Altenberg.",
"score": "1.7674229"
},
{
"id": "32483885",
"title": "Michal Barda",
"text": " Born in Prague, he practiced a lot of sports as table tennis, football and skiing when he started with team handball at Slavia Praha in 1965. From the beginning he played in goal and was moved up to their senior squad at the age of fifteen. 1976, at the age of twenty-one, he made his first cap for Czechoslovakia; in total he played 218 caps and as a goalkeeper scored 4 goals (!) between 1976 and 1992. In 1979 and after 14 years with Slavia Praha, he moved to HC Dukla Praha which he helped to raise to one of the most prominent European clubs at that time, including the ",
"score": "1.6856081"
},
{
"id": "14316682",
"title": "Josef Maleček",
"text": " Josef \"Pepa, Pepi, Joe\" Maleček (18 June 1903 – 26 September 1982) was a very successful Czechoslovak ice hockey player during the period between World Wars. He was born in Prague and died in Bayport, New York, United States. In 1924 he participated with the Czechoslovak team in the first Winter Olympics ice hockey tournament. Four years later he was a member of the Czechoslovak team which participated in the 1928 Olympics ice hockey tournament. In 1936 he finished fourth with the Czechoslovak team in the Olympic ice hockey tournament. After communist takeover in Czechoslovakia (1948) he emigrated from the country. Maleček was also a tennis player, who competed in both the Wimbledon and French Championships in the early 1930s. Maleček also represented Czechoslovakia at the Davis Cup.",
"score": "1.6412861"
},
{
"id": "32440971",
"title": "Michal Ondráček",
"text": " Michal Ondráček (born 8 June 1973) is a retired Czech football player who played in the Czech First League for FC Baník Ostrava and SK České Budějovice. He later played for clubs including MFK Karviná and FC Hlučín.",
"score": "1.600143"
},
{
"id": "16544804",
"title": "Václav Mašek",
"text": " Václav Mašek (born 21 March 1941) is a Czech football player who played as a striker. He was a member of the Czechoslovakia national football team, for which he played 16 matches and scored 5 goals. In Czechoslovakia, he played 313 league matches and scored 127 goals for Sparta Prague. He was a participant in the 1962 FIFA World Cup, where his country were runners up, losing to Brazil in the final. In a match against Mexico, he became famous for scoring a goal after only 16 seconds of play, the fastest goal in World Cup history until forty years later, when his record was beaten by Hakan Şükür of Turkey, by scoring after 11 seconds in the 3rd place match of the 2002 FIFA World Cup.",
"score": "1.5891967"
},
{
"id": "26120440",
"title": "Michal Sýkora",
"text": " Michal Sýkora (born 5 July 1973) is a Czech former professional ice hockey defenseman who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the San Jose Sharks, Chicago Blackhawks, Tampa Bay Lightning and Philadelphia Flyers. He is not related to the NHL hockey player Petr Sýkora who played with the New Jersey Devils in the 2011-12 season. He is the older brother to Petr Sýkora, who played 12 NHL games.",
"score": "1.5884466"
},
{
"id": "26680616",
"title": "Michal Mařík",
"text": " Michal Mařík (born May 18, 1975) is a Czech former professional ice hockey goaltender. Mařík played a total of 312 games in the Czech Extraliga over 12 seasons from 1993 to 2005. He played for HC Plzeň, HC Karlovy Vary, Motor České Budějovice, HC Zlín, HC Oceláři Třinec, HC Havířov Panthers, HC Litvínov and HC Vítkovice. He also played in the GET-ligaen for Stjernen Hockey. Mařík played in the 1995 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships for the Czech Republic.",
"score": "1.5854899"
},
{
"id": "13635270",
"title": "Václav Pantůček",
"text": " Václav Pantůček (24 November 1934 in Mikulov, Czechoslovakia – 21 July 1994 in Brno, Czech Republic) was a Czech ice hockey player who competed in the 1956 Winter Olympics and in the 1960 Winter Olympics.",
"score": "1.5843022"
},
{
"id": "2618454",
"title": "Michal Kriško",
"text": " Michal Krisko (born November 23, 1988) is a Czech male volleyball player. He is part of the Czech Republic men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for VK Ceske Budejovice.",
"score": "1.5826626"
},
{
"id": "28250642",
"title": "Michal Mikeska",
"text": " Michal Mikeska (born 28 April 1976 in Zlín) is a Czech professional ice hockey player currently playing for HC České Budějovice signed a contract after leaving team Salavat Yulaev Ufa in the Kontinental Hockey League. Mikeska began playing for HC Pardubice in the Czech Extraliga. After spending one season with HC Havířov, he returned to Pardubice and remained with the team for the next seven seasons. His best season came in 2004-05 where he led the league in points, scoring 21 goals and 34 assists for 55 points in 50 games. The next season was a disappointment as he only managed just 7 goals in 46 games. It turned out to be Mikeska's final season with the team as he moved on to play in Russia with Salavat Yulaev Ufa in 2006. He had an impressive first season with the team, scoring 13 goals and 24 assists for 37 points, only Vladimir Antipov scored more points for the team.",
"score": "1.5779567"
},
{
"id": "26722889",
"title": "Josef Mikoláš",
"text": " Josef Mikoláš started playing for ice-hockey team Pracovní zálohy Ostrava in 1956, but soon he came to another Ostrava team, VŽKG Vítkovice, who were playing in the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League, the highest league in former Czechoslovakia. He quickly got recognition for both his goaltender's skills and courage with which he faced the shots, although he was not wearing any head protection in that time. In 1959 he was elected the best Czechoslovak goaltender of the season. His career culminated in 1961, when he was nominated into the Czechoslovak national ice hockey team for the World Ice Hockey Championships in Geneva, Switzerland. The team won most of the matches and surprisingly beat even the Soviet Union 6–4. They drew with Canada 1–1 and finally took silver due to Canada's better overall score. For his performance Josef Mikoláš won the trophy of the Czechoslovak Sportsperson of the Year. In 1962 the World Championships took place in Colorado Springs, USA, but the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia boycotted the tournament. In 1963 they took bronze at the World Championships in Stockholm, Sweden.",
"score": "1.5729742"
},
{
"id": "12327997",
"title": "Sport in the Czech Republic",
"text": " Some of the most famous to have competed in both sports are Aleš Dryml Sr. and his son Aleš Dryml Jr., Roman Motoušek, Zdeněk Schneiderwind, Antonín Šváb, Luboš Tomíček and Václav Verner.",
"score": "1.5689728"
},
{
"id": "29060301",
"title": "Michal Kempný",
"text": " Michal Kempný (born 8 September 1990) is a Czech professional ice hockey defenceman for the Hershey Bears of the AHL while contracted to the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League (NHL). Kempný won the Stanley Cup as a member of the Capitals in 2018.",
"score": "1.5683224"
},
{
"id": "24927257",
"title": "Havlíčkův Brod",
"text": " Augusta (1946–2017), ice hockey player and coach ; František Janák (born 1951), glass artist ; Pavel Poc (born 1964), politician ; Lenka Šmídová (born 1975), sailor, Olympic winner ; Josef Marha (born 1976), ice hockey player ; Radek Martínek (born 1976), ice hockey player ; Petr Zelenka (born 1976), serial killer ; Jan Novák (born 1979), ice hockey player ; Tomáš Zdechovský (born 1979), politician ; Josef Vašíček (1980–2011), ice hockey player ; Antonín Dušek (born 1986), ice hockey player ; Hynek Zohorna (born 1990), ice hockey player ; Tomáš Souček (born 1995), footballer ; Radim Zohorna (born 1996), ice hockey player ; Vítek Vaněček (born 1996), ice hockey player ",
"score": "1.5666685"
},
{
"id": "31641209",
"title": "Michal Vabroušek",
"text": " Michal Vabroušek (born 21 May 1975 in Prague) is a Czech rower. Vabrousek started his international career rowing for Czechoslovakia at the 1992 World Rowing Junior Championships in Montreal, Canada. He competed at the 1996 and 2004 Olympics.",
"score": "1.5619755"
},
{
"id": "14752589",
"title": "Michal Václavík",
"text": " Michal Václavík (born 3 April 1976, in Karviná) is a Czech football goalkeeper currently playing for FC Hlučín. He played over 100 matches in the Gambrinus Liga.",
"score": "1.5602016"
},
{
"id": "6013681",
"title": "Adam Pecháček",
"text": " Adam Pecháček (born 19 February 1995) is a Czech basketball player for Artland Dragons of the ProA and Czech national team. Pecháček spent the 2019-20 season with Phoenix Hagen, averaging 13.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 1.1 assists per game. On 14 October 2020, Pecháček signed with the PS Karlsruhe Lions. He participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"score": "1.5594747"
},
{
"id": "5881734",
"title": "Michal Šmarda",
"text": " He played in the Czech First League, making over 300 appearances for clubs including SK Hradec Králové, FK Viktoria Žižkov and SK Sigma Olomouc. He won the 1998–99 Czech First League with AC Sparta Prague. Šmarda played the final match of his professional career in May 2008 and subsequently moved into coaching.",
"score": "1.5578301"
},
{
"id": "4072670",
"title": "Hyrulnizam Juma'at",
"text": " Hyrulnizam is currently studying at Republic Polytechnic and has stated that Petr Čech is his sporting hero.",
"score": "1.55371"
},
{
"id": "15766351",
"title": "Jiří Holeček",
"text": " Jiří Holeček (born March 18, 1944) is a Czech professional ice hockey coach and former player. Holeček played in the Czechoslovak Elite League from 1964 to 1979, and on the Czechoslovak national team for many years. After joining the military he participated in the hockey camp of Dukla Jihlava, but coming from an insignificant Slávia team at the time, he did not make it higher than the number three goaltender and was loaned to HC Košice in the eastern part of the country. After starting his career on the Košice team in 1963–64, Holecek played there for 10 years until he joined Sparta Prague for the 1973/1974 season. Holecek played 488 league games, and despite ",
"score": "1.5517457"
}
] | [
"Michal Vacek\n Michal Vacek (born March 10, 1987 in Prague) is a Czech bobsledder. Vacek competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics for the Czech Republic. He teamed with driver Jan Vrba in the two-man event, finishing 24th, and with Vrba, Dominik Dvořák and Dominik Suchý in the four-man event, finishing 16th. As of April 2014, his best showing at the World Championships is 12th, in the 2013 four-man event. Vacek made his World Cup debut in November 2012. As of April 2014, his best finish is 5th, in a four-man event in 2012-13 at Altenberg.",
"Michal Barda\n Born in Prague, he practiced a lot of sports as table tennis, football and skiing when he started with team handball at Slavia Praha in 1965. From the beginning he played in goal and was moved up to their senior squad at the age of fifteen. 1976, at the age of twenty-one, he made his first cap for Czechoslovakia; in total he played 218 caps and as a goalkeeper scored 4 goals (!) between 1976 and 1992. In 1979 and after 14 years with Slavia Praha, he moved to HC Dukla Praha which he helped to raise to one of the most prominent European clubs at that time, including the ",
"Josef Maleček\n Josef \"Pepa, Pepi, Joe\" Maleček (18 June 1903 – 26 September 1982) was a very successful Czechoslovak ice hockey player during the period between World Wars. He was born in Prague and died in Bayport, New York, United States. In 1924 he participated with the Czechoslovak team in the first Winter Olympics ice hockey tournament. Four years later he was a member of the Czechoslovak team which participated in the 1928 Olympics ice hockey tournament. In 1936 he finished fourth with the Czechoslovak team in the Olympic ice hockey tournament. After communist takeover in Czechoslovakia (1948) he emigrated from the country. Maleček was also a tennis player, who competed in both the Wimbledon and French Championships in the early 1930s. Maleček also represented Czechoslovakia at the Davis Cup.",
"Michal Ondráček\n Michal Ondráček (born 8 June 1973) is a retired Czech football player who played in the Czech First League for FC Baník Ostrava and SK České Budějovice. He later played for clubs including MFK Karviná and FC Hlučín.",
"Václav Mašek\n Václav Mašek (born 21 March 1941) is a Czech football player who played as a striker. He was a member of the Czechoslovakia national football team, for which he played 16 matches and scored 5 goals. In Czechoslovakia, he played 313 league matches and scored 127 goals for Sparta Prague. He was a participant in the 1962 FIFA World Cup, where his country were runners up, losing to Brazil in the final. In a match against Mexico, he became famous for scoring a goal after only 16 seconds of play, the fastest goal in World Cup history until forty years later, when his record was beaten by Hakan Şükür of Turkey, by scoring after 11 seconds in the 3rd place match of the 2002 FIFA World Cup.",
"Michal Sýkora\n Michal Sýkora (born 5 July 1973) is a Czech former professional ice hockey defenseman who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the San Jose Sharks, Chicago Blackhawks, Tampa Bay Lightning and Philadelphia Flyers. He is not related to the NHL hockey player Petr Sýkora who played with the New Jersey Devils in the 2011-12 season. He is the older brother to Petr Sýkora, who played 12 NHL games.",
"Michal Mařík\n Michal Mařík (born May 18, 1975) is a Czech former professional ice hockey goaltender. Mařík played a total of 312 games in the Czech Extraliga over 12 seasons from 1993 to 2005. He played for HC Plzeň, HC Karlovy Vary, Motor České Budějovice, HC Zlín, HC Oceláři Třinec, HC Havířov Panthers, HC Litvínov and HC Vítkovice. He also played in the GET-ligaen for Stjernen Hockey. Mařík played in the 1995 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships for the Czech Republic.",
"Václav Pantůček\n Václav Pantůček (24 November 1934 in Mikulov, Czechoslovakia – 21 July 1994 in Brno, Czech Republic) was a Czech ice hockey player who competed in the 1956 Winter Olympics and in the 1960 Winter Olympics.",
"Michal Kriško\n Michal Krisko (born November 23, 1988) is a Czech male volleyball player. He is part of the Czech Republic men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for VK Ceske Budejovice.",
"Michal Mikeska\n Michal Mikeska (born 28 April 1976 in Zlín) is a Czech professional ice hockey player currently playing for HC České Budějovice signed a contract after leaving team Salavat Yulaev Ufa in the Kontinental Hockey League. Mikeska began playing for HC Pardubice in the Czech Extraliga. After spending one season with HC Havířov, he returned to Pardubice and remained with the team for the next seven seasons. His best season came in 2004-05 where he led the league in points, scoring 21 goals and 34 assists for 55 points in 50 games. The next season was a disappointment as he only managed just 7 goals in 46 games. It turned out to be Mikeska's final season with the team as he moved on to play in Russia with Salavat Yulaev Ufa in 2006. He had an impressive first season with the team, scoring 13 goals and 24 assists for 37 points, only Vladimir Antipov scored more points for the team.",
"Josef Mikoláš\n Josef Mikoláš started playing for ice-hockey team Pracovní zálohy Ostrava in 1956, but soon he came to another Ostrava team, VŽKG Vítkovice, who were playing in the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League, the highest league in former Czechoslovakia. He quickly got recognition for both his goaltender's skills and courage with which he faced the shots, although he was not wearing any head protection in that time. In 1959 he was elected the best Czechoslovak goaltender of the season. His career culminated in 1961, when he was nominated into the Czechoslovak national ice hockey team for the World Ice Hockey Championships in Geneva, Switzerland. The team won most of the matches and surprisingly beat even the Soviet Union 6–4. They drew with Canada 1–1 and finally took silver due to Canada's better overall score. For his performance Josef Mikoláš won the trophy of the Czechoslovak Sportsperson of the Year. In 1962 the World Championships took place in Colorado Springs, USA, but the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia boycotted the tournament. In 1963 they took bronze at the World Championships in Stockholm, Sweden.",
"Sport in the Czech Republic\n Some of the most famous to have competed in both sports are Aleš Dryml Sr. and his son Aleš Dryml Jr., Roman Motoušek, Zdeněk Schneiderwind, Antonín Šváb, Luboš Tomíček and Václav Verner.",
"Michal Kempný\n Michal Kempný (born 8 September 1990) is a Czech professional ice hockey defenceman for the Hershey Bears of the AHL while contracted to the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League (NHL). Kempný won the Stanley Cup as a member of the Capitals in 2018.",
"Havlíčkův Brod\n Augusta (1946–2017), ice hockey player and coach ; František Janák (born 1951), glass artist ; Pavel Poc (born 1964), politician ; Lenka Šmídová (born 1975), sailor, Olympic winner ; Josef Marha (born 1976), ice hockey player ; Radek Martínek (born 1976), ice hockey player ; Petr Zelenka (born 1976), serial killer ; Jan Novák (born 1979), ice hockey player ; Tomáš Zdechovský (born 1979), politician ; Josef Vašíček (1980–2011), ice hockey player ; Antonín Dušek (born 1986), ice hockey player ; Hynek Zohorna (born 1990), ice hockey player ; Tomáš Souček (born 1995), footballer ; Radim Zohorna (born 1996), ice hockey player ; Vítek Vaněček (born 1996), ice hockey player ",
"Michal Vabroušek\n Michal Vabroušek (born 21 May 1975 in Prague) is a Czech rower. Vabrousek started his international career rowing for Czechoslovakia at the 1992 World Rowing Junior Championships in Montreal, Canada. He competed at the 1996 and 2004 Olympics.",
"Michal Václavík\n Michal Václavík (born 3 April 1976, in Karviná) is a Czech football goalkeeper currently playing for FC Hlučín. He played over 100 matches in the Gambrinus Liga.",
"Adam Pecháček\n Adam Pecháček (born 19 February 1995) is a Czech basketball player for Artland Dragons of the ProA and Czech national team. Pecháček spent the 2019-20 season with Phoenix Hagen, averaging 13.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 1.1 assists per game. On 14 October 2020, Pecháček signed with the PS Karlsruhe Lions. He participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"Michal Šmarda\n He played in the Czech First League, making over 300 appearances for clubs including SK Hradec Králové, FK Viktoria Žižkov and SK Sigma Olomouc. He won the 1998–99 Czech First League with AC Sparta Prague. Šmarda played the final match of his professional career in May 2008 and subsequently moved into coaching.",
"Hyrulnizam Juma'at\n Hyrulnizam is currently studying at Republic Polytechnic and has stated that Petr Čech is his sporting hero.",
"Jiří Holeček\n Jiří Holeček (born March 18, 1944) is a Czech professional ice hockey coach and former player. Holeček played in the Czechoslovak Elite League from 1964 to 1979, and on the Czechoslovak national team for many years. After joining the military he participated in the hockey camp of Dukla Jihlava, but coming from an insignificant Slávia team at the time, he did not make it higher than the number three goaltender and was loaned to HC Košice in the eastern part of the country. After starting his career on the Košice team in 1963–64, Holecek played there for 10 years until he joined Sparta Prague for the 1973/1974 season. Holecek played 488 league games, and despite "
] |
What sport does Colombian Cycling Federation play? | [
"cycle sport",
"bicycle sport",
"bike sport",
"cycling sport",
"sport cycling",
"sports cycling",
"cycling sports"
] | sport | Colombian Cycling Federation | 3,769,332 | 84 | [
{
"id": "6203968",
"title": "Colombian Cycling Federation",
"text": " The Colombian Cycling Federation or FCC (Federación Colombiana de Ciclismo) is the national governing body of cycle racing in Colombia. The FCC is a member of the UCI and COPACI.",
"score": "1.9849528"
},
{
"id": "30311209",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " with Colombian riders enjoying international success. One of the factors cited for this success has been the establishment of the 4-72 Colombia cycling team (formerly known as Colombia es Pasión-Café de Colombia), which has developed several cyclists who have gone on to compete for UCI Worldteams. The government-backed Colombia-Coldeportes cycling team competed at the 2013 Giro d'Italia, and was the first all-Colombian team to do so for 21 years. The team aimed to secure UCI ProTeam status and compete in the Tour de France, however the team announced its disbanding in October 2015 due to the withdrawal of financial support from Coldeportes, the Colombian government's sports ministry. Riders who graduated to the UCI World Tour from the team included Esteban Chaves and Darwin Atapuma. High-profile ",
"score": "1.7739798"
},
{
"id": "30311212",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " de l'Avenir 1980 ; Víctor Hugo Peña, one of only three Colombian cyclists to have ever worn the yellow jersey in the Tour de France (2003). ; Rigoberto Urán, silver medal winner in the Men's Olympic Road Race, 2012 Summer Olympics, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2013, 2014), second place in the Tour de France (2017). ; Mariana Pajón, gold medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event, gold medal winner at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event. ; Carlos Oquendo, bronze medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the men's BMX event. ; Nairo Quintana, 2nd place overall in the Tour de France, 2013, ",
"score": "1.7704964"
},
{
"id": "30311213",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " place overall Tour of the Basque Country, 2013, 1st place overall Vuelta a Burgos, 2013, 1st place overall Giro d'Italia 2014, winner of Tirreno–Adriatico 2015, 1st place overall Vuelta a España 2016. ; Edwin Ávila, double track cycling world champion in the points race (2011,2014). ; Esteban Chaves, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2016) ; Carlos Ramirez placed third at the 2016 Summer Olympics in men's BMX ; Iván Sosa, 1st place overall in the 2018 Vuelta a Burgos ; Fernando Gaviria wearer of the Yellow Jersey in the 2018 Tour de France ; Egan Bernal winner of the general and youth classifications in the 2019 Tour de France and 2021 Giro d'Italia ",
"score": "1.7698865"
},
{
"id": "30311208",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " Cycling in Colombia became very popular with the beginning of the annual Vuelta a Colombia race in 1951, followed by the annual Clásico RCN starting in 1961. The triumphs of Martín Emilio \"Cochise\" Rodríguez in European cycling competitions increased the sport's popularity, which in turn helped to develop the Colombian Cycling Federation. Rodriguez was followed by professional Colombian cyclists known as the \"Colombian beetles\", which include up to this date Luis \"Lucho\" Herrera, Luis Felipe Laverde, Fabio Parra, Víctor Hugo Peña, Santiago Botero, Mauricio Soler. The \"escarabajo\" (beetle) nickname was coined by radio announcer José Enrique Buitrago, while watching Ramón Hoyos climb a hill ahead of French professional racer José Beyaert during the 1955 Vuelta a Colombia. Colombian cycling has enjoyed a renaissance in the early ",
"score": "1.7595744"
},
{
"id": "31318257",
"title": "Colombia (cycling team)",
"text": " In January 2012, it was announced that the team had received invites to the Italian classic races Tirreno–Adriatico, Milan–San Remo and Giro di Lombardia. They were invited to ride the 2013 Giro d'Italia. The team was also invited to the 2014 Giro d'Italia, where during the tenth stage of the race, members of the team wore a white cockade, in memory of the people who died in the Fundación bus fire in Colombia. In 2015 they were invited to the Vuelta a España for the first time. At 30 August it became clear that Cano, Qunitero and Ávila who all cycle for Team Colombia, was picked out for Colombia National Team at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships in Richmond, Virginia. In October 2015, the team announced they would be disbanding and not returning for the 2016 season, citing shortfalls in sponsorship from the Colombian Sports Ministry.",
"score": "1.7442112"
},
{
"id": "31318256",
"title": "Colombia (cycling team)",
"text": " Colombia was a Colombian UCI Professional Continental cycling team based in Adro (Italy) that participated in UCI Continental Circuits and UCI World Tour races.",
"score": "1.7232784"
},
{
"id": "30311210",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " emerging in this period include Nairo Quintana, Rigoberto Uran, Sergio Henao, Carlos Betancur and Mariana Pajon. The two main strongholds of the sport in Colombia are the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the centre of the country and Antioquia in the west, both being mountainous regions. During the 1990s, the government of the Colombian capital, Bogotá introduced the Ciclovía, which became popular and were introduced later into other Colombian cities. The government of Bogotá later built Bogotá's Bike Paths Network to sponsor the practice of sports by the population and to curb the city's increasing pollution by drivers. The network extends throughout the city with bicycle use increasing five times in the city. There is an estimated 300,000 to 400,000 trips made daily in Bogotá by bicycle.",
"score": "1.7153172"
},
{
"id": "30311204",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " Sports in Colombia includes professional sports leagues, as well as amateur leagues for numerous sports. Football, cycling, and roller skating are the most popular sports in Colombia. The Government of Colombia sponsors numerous individuals and teams nationally and internationally through the Ministry of Culture to enable sportspeople to represent Colombia in competition. The achievements of professional sportspeople are a source of national pride for Colombians.",
"score": "1.7145839"
},
{
"id": "9649080",
"title": "Colombia at the UCI Track Cycling World Championships",
"text": " Sources Colombia competed at the 2016 UCI Track Cycling World Championships at the Lee Valley VeloPark in London, United Kingdom from 2–4 March 2016. A team of 7 cyclists (2 women, 5 men) was announced to represent the country in the event.",
"score": "1.6856879"
},
{
"id": "26704540",
"title": "Medellín",
"text": " Another representative sport in the city is cycling. Its respective sport venue is the Martin Rodriguez Velodrome, named after Colombian road racing cyclist Martín Emilio Rodríguez. BMX is also catered for, and its main venue is the BMX Track Antonio Roldán Betancur. The retired cycling three-time Tour de France stage winner and World Time-Trial Champion Santiago Botero Echeverry and the Olympic Gold Medalist and multiple BMX World Champion Mariana Pajón Londoño are both from Medellín. EnCicla is the name of Medellín's bicycle sharing system, the first bike sharing program in Latin America and the only one of its kind in Colombia. It was the shared winner of the Sustainable Transport Award in 2012 along with San Francisco. EnCicla is the result of an agreement between the metropolitan area of the Valley of Aburrá and EAFIT University. EnCicla is integrated within the city's existing infrastructure of cycle routes, mass transit, and public transport systems. It is available from Monday to Friday from 5:30 am to 8 pm from every EnCicla station.",
"score": "1.6780596"
},
{
"id": "30311234",
"title": "Sport in Colombia",
"text": " The skating federation has started to develop ice sports, including bandy, ice hockey, short track and speed skating",
"score": "1.6691731"
},
{
"id": "25184299",
"title": "Gran Fondo",
"text": " cycling has to catch up in popularity with mountain biking and triathlon, but several Gran Fondo events are showing up on the scene, like Gran Fondo Giro del Lago, and set for 2017, GFNY Chile just outside Santiago. Colombia Colombia is a country where enthusiasm for cycling is near Italian levels and bigger than in most other countries. Thanks to the new generation of cyclists in the 2010s, Gran Fondo races gained a lot of attention and became very popular, hosted by local stars like Rigoberto Urán El Giro de Rigo, Nairo Quintana Gran Fondo Nairo Quintana, and even old glories like Santiago ",
"score": "1.6680813"
},
{
"id": "27164642",
"title": "BetPlay Cycling Team",
"text": " The BetPlay Cycling Team is a Colombian cycling team founded in 2018. In 2019, the team upgraded to UCI Continental, but returned to being an amateur team in 2020.",
"score": "1.6678314"
},
{
"id": "758824",
"title": "Colombia Federation of Skating Sports",
"text": " Colombia Federation of Skating Sports (Spanish: Federación Colombiana de Patinaje) is the sports governing body of bandy, figure skating, ice hockey, speed skating and short track in Colombia. The federation is a member of the Federation of International Bandy, the International Skating Union and the International Ice Hockey Federation.",
"score": "1.6637138"
},
{
"id": "4288479",
"title": "Colombia",
"text": " Tejo is Colombia's national sport and is a team sport that involves launching projectiles to hit a target. But of all sports in Colombia, football is the most popular. Colombia was the champion of the 2001 Copa América, in which they set a new record of being undefeated, conceding no goals and winning each match. Colombia has been awarded \"mover of the year\" twice. Colombia is a hub for roller skaters. The national team is a perennial powerhouse at the World Roller Speed Skating Championships. Colombia has traditionally been very good in cycling and a large number of Colombian cyclists have triumphed in major competitions of cycling. Baseball is popular in cities ",
"score": "1.6598105"
},
{
"id": "28026937",
"title": "Colombian Athletics Federation",
"text": " The Federación Colombiana de Atletismo (FECODATLE; Colombian Athletics Federation) is the governing body for the sport of athletics in Colombia. Current president is Lino Varela.",
"score": "1.6569932"
},
{
"id": "7989830",
"title": "Venezuelan Cycling Federation",
"text": " The Venezuelan Cycling Federation (in Spanish: Federación Venezolana de Ciclismo) is the national governing body of cycle racing in Venezuela. It is a member of the UCI and COPACI.",
"score": "1.6479985"
},
{
"id": "27054891",
"title": "Café de Colombia",
"text": " The team came into existence just as Colombian cyclists were achieving successes in Europe. This started with a Colombian National Cycling team entering and winning the Tour de l'Avenir in 1980 with Alfonso Florez. The 1983 Tour de France was the first time that the race was \"open\" to accommodate amateurs to compete. As a result, the Colombian cyclists were able to compete in a Colombian national cycling team. The following year the Colombian national team, with sponsorship from VARTA batteries, returned to the 1984 Tour de France where Luis Herrera, still an amateur, won the stage to the Alpe d'Huez. After these successes, a professional cycling team was set up that would give contracts and a chance of success ",
"score": "1.6472094"
},
{
"id": "27054890",
"title": "Café de Colombia",
"text": " Café de Colombia was a Colombian based professional road bicycle racing Cycling team active from 1983 to 1990. The team was sponsored by the Colombian coffee growers Federación Nacional de Cafeteros de Colombia.",
"score": "1.6431564"
}
] | [
"Colombian Cycling Federation\n The Colombian Cycling Federation or FCC (Federación Colombiana de Ciclismo) is the national governing body of cycle racing in Colombia. The FCC is a member of the UCI and COPACI.",
"Sport in Colombia\n with Colombian riders enjoying international success. One of the factors cited for this success has been the establishment of the 4-72 Colombia cycling team (formerly known as Colombia es Pasión-Café de Colombia), which has developed several cyclists who have gone on to compete for UCI Worldteams. The government-backed Colombia-Coldeportes cycling team competed at the 2013 Giro d'Italia, and was the first all-Colombian team to do so for 21 years. The team aimed to secure UCI ProTeam status and compete in the Tour de France, however the team announced its disbanding in October 2015 due to the withdrawal of financial support from Coldeportes, the Colombian government's sports ministry. Riders who graduated to the UCI World Tour from the team included Esteban Chaves and Darwin Atapuma. High-profile ",
"Sport in Colombia\n de l'Avenir 1980 ; Víctor Hugo Peña, one of only three Colombian cyclists to have ever worn the yellow jersey in the Tour de France (2003). ; Rigoberto Urán, silver medal winner in the Men's Olympic Road Race, 2012 Summer Olympics, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2013, 2014), second place in the Tour de France (2017). ; Mariana Pajón, gold medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event, gold medal winner at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event. ; Carlos Oquendo, bronze medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the men's BMX event. ; Nairo Quintana, 2nd place overall in the Tour de France, 2013, ",
"Sport in Colombia\n place overall Tour of the Basque Country, 2013, 1st place overall Vuelta a Burgos, 2013, 1st place overall Giro d'Italia 2014, winner of Tirreno–Adriatico 2015, 1st place overall Vuelta a España 2016. ; Edwin Ávila, double track cycling world champion in the points race (2011,2014). ; Esteban Chaves, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2016) ; Carlos Ramirez placed third at the 2016 Summer Olympics in men's BMX ; Iván Sosa, 1st place overall in the 2018 Vuelta a Burgos ; Fernando Gaviria wearer of the Yellow Jersey in the 2018 Tour de France ; Egan Bernal winner of the general and youth classifications in the 2019 Tour de France and 2021 Giro d'Italia ",
"Sport in Colombia\n Cycling in Colombia became very popular with the beginning of the annual Vuelta a Colombia race in 1951, followed by the annual Clásico RCN starting in 1961. The triumphs of Martín Emilio \"Cochise\" Rodríguez in European cycling competitions increased the sport's popularity, which in turn helped to develop the Colombian Cycling Federation. Rodriguez was followed by professional Colombian cyclists known as the \"Colombian beetles\", which include up to this date Luis \"Lucho\" Herrera, Luis Felipe Laverde, Fabio Parra, Víctor Hugo Peña, Santiago Botero, Mauricio Soler. The \"escarabajo\" (beetle) nickname was coined by radio announcer José Enrique Buitrago, while watching Ramón Hoyos climb a hill ahead of French professional racer José Beyaert during the 1955 Vuelta a Colombia. Colombian cycling has enjoyed a renaissance in the early ",
"Colombia (cycling team)\n In January 2012, it was announced that the team had received invites to the Italian classic races Tirreno–Adriatico, Milan–San Remo and Giro di Lombardia. They were invited to ride the 2013 Giro d'Italia. The team was also invited to the 2014 Giro d'Italia, where during the tenth stage of the race, members of the team wore a white cockade, in memory of the people who died in the Fundación bus fire in Colombia. In 2015 they were invited to the Vuelta a España for the first time. At 30 August it became clear that Cano, Qunitero and Ávila who all cycle for Team Colombia, was picked out for Colombia National Team at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships in Richmond, Virginia. In October 2015, the team announced they would be disbanding and not returning for the 2016 season, citing shortfalls in sponsorship from the Colombian Sports Ministry.",
"Colombia (cycling team)\n Colombia was a Colombian UCI Professional Continental cycling team based in Adro (Italy) that participated in UCI Continental Circuits and UCI World Tour races.",
"Sport in Colombia\n emerging in this period include Nairo Quintana, Rigoberto Uran, Sergio Henao, Carlos Betancur and Mariana Pajon. The two main strongholds of the sport in Colombia are the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the centre of the country and Antioquia in the west, both being mountainous regions. During the 1990s, the government of the Colombian capital, Bogotá introduced the Ciclovía, which became popular and were introduced later into other Colombian cities. The government of Bogotá later built Bogotá's Bike Paths Network to sponsor the practice of sports by the population and to curb the city's increasing pollution by drivers. The network extends throughout the city with bicycle use increasing five times in the city. There is an estimated 300,000 to 400,000 trips made daily in Bogotá by bicycle.",
"Sport in Colombia\n Sports in Colombia includes professional sports leagues, as well as amateur leagues for numerous sports. Football, cycling, and roller skating are the most popular sports in Colombia. The Government of Colombia sponsors numerous individuals and teams nationally and internationally through the Ministry of Culture to enable sportspeople to represent Colombia in competition. The achievements of professional sportspeople are a source of national pride for Colombians.",
"Colombia at the UCI Track Cycling World Championships\n Sources Colombia competed at the 2016 UCI Track Cycling World Championships at the Lee Valley VeloPark in London, United Kingdom from 2–4 March 2016. A team of 7 cyclists (2 women, 5 men) was announced to represent the country in the event.",
"Medellín\n Another representative sport in the city is cycling. Its respective sport venue is the Martin Rodriguez Velodrome, named after Colombian road racing cyclist Martín Emilio Rodríguez. BMX is also catered for, and its main venue is the BMX Track Antonio Roldán Betancur. The retired cycling three-time Tour de France stage winner and World Time-Trial Champion Santiago Botero Echeverry and the Olympic Gold Medalist and multiple BMX World Champion Mariana Pajón Londoño are both from Medellín. EnCicla is the name of Medellín's bicycle sharing system, the first bike sharing program in Latin America and the only one of its kind in Colombia. It was the shared winner of the Sustainable Transport Award in 2012 along with San Francisco. EnCicla is the result of an agreement between the metropolitan area of the Valley of Aburrá and EAFIT University. EnCicla is integrated within the city's existing infrastructure of cycle routes, mass transit, and public transport systems. It is available from Monday to Friday from 5:30 am to 8 pm from every EnCicla station.",
"Sport in Colombia\n The skating federation has started to develop ice sports, including bandy, ice hockey, short track and speed skating",
"Gran Fondo\n cycling has to catch up in popularity with mountain biking and triathlon, but several Gran Fondo events are showing up on the scene, like Gran Fondo Giro del Lago, and set for 2017, GFNY Chile just outside Santiago. Colombia Colombia is a country where enthusiasm for cycling is near Italian levels and bigger than in most other countries. Thanks to the new generation of cyclists in the 2010s, Gran Fondo races gained a lot of attention and became very popular, hosted by local stars like Rigoberto Urán El Giro de Rigo, Nairo Quintana Gran Fondo Nairo Quintana, and even old glories like Santiago ",
"BetPlay Cycling Team\n The BetPlay Cycling Team is a Colombian cycling team founded in 2018. In 2019, the team upgraded to UCI Continental, but returned to being an amateur team in 2020.",
"Colombia Federation of Skating Sports\n Colombia Federation of Skating Sports (Spanish: Federación Colombiana de Patinaje) is the sports governing body of bandy, figure skating, ice hockey, speed skating and short track in Colombia. The federation is a member of the Federation of International Bandy, the International Skating Union and the International Ice Hockey Federation.",
"Colombia\n Tejo is Colombia's national sport and is a team sport that involves launching projectiles to hit a target. But of all sports in Colombia, football is the most popular. Colombia was the champion of the 2001 Copa América, in which they set a new record of being undefeated, conceding no goals and winning each match. Colombia has been awarded \"mover of the year\" twice. Colombia is a hub for roller skaters. The national team is a perennial powerhouse at the World Roller Speed Skating Championships. Colombia has traditionally been very good in cycling and a large number of Colombian cyclists have triumphed in major competitions of cycling. Baseball is popular in cities ",
"Colombian Athletics Federation\n The Federación Colombiana de Atletismo (FECODATLE; Colombian Athletics Federation) is the governing body for the sport of athletics in Colombia. Current president is Lino Varela.",
"Venezuelan Cycling Federation\n The Venezuelan Cycling Federation (in Spanish: Federación Venezolana de Ciclismo) is the national governing body of cycle racing in Venezuela. It is a member of the UCI and COPACI.",
"Café de Colombia\n The team came into existence just as Colombian cyclists were achieving successes in Europe. This started with a Colombian National Cycling team entering and winning the Tour de l'Avenir in 1980 with Alfonso Florez. The 1983 Tour de France was the first time that the race was \"open\" to accommodate amateurs to compete. As a result, the Colombian cyclists were able to compete in a Colombian national cycling team. The following year the Colombian national team, with sponsorship from VARTA batteries, returned to the 1984 Tour de France where Luis Herrera, still an amateur, won the stage to the Alpe d'Huez. After these successes, a professional cycling team was set up that would give contracts and a chance of success ",
"Café de Colombia\n Café de Colombia was a Colombian based professional road bicycle racing Cycling team active from 1983 to 1990. The team was sponsored by the Colombian coffee growers Federación Nacional de Cafeteros de Colombia."
] |
What sport does 1920–21 Northern Football League play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 1920–21 Northern Football League | 3,135,258 | 72 | [
{
"id": "9033334",
"title": "1920–21 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1920–21 Northern Football League season was the 28th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "2.0907483"
},
{
"id": "9033353",
"title": "1921–22 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1921–22 Northern Football League season was the 29th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "2.0007315"
},
{
"id": "9033335",
"title": "1920–21 Northern Football League",
"text": "Tow Law Town ; Langley Park The league featured 12 clubs which competed in the last season, along with two new clubs:",
"score": "1.9714941"
},
{
"id": "9035008",
"title": "1922–23 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1922–23 Northern Football League season was the 30th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "1.9595616"
},
{
"id": "8822065",
"title": "1919–20 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1919–20 Northern Football League season was the 27th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England. South Bank were crowned champions via a three team playoff after they finished the season on 38 points along with Bishop Auckland and Crook Town.",
"score": "1.9194572"
},
{
"id": "9033354",
"title": "1921–22 Northern Football League",
"text": "Cockfield The league featured 13 clubs which competed in the last season, along with one new club:",
"score": "1.8866305"
},
{
"id": "9035009",
"title": "1922–23 Northern Football League",
"text": "Loftus Albion The league featured 13 clubs which competed in the last season, along with one new club:",
"score": "1.8705776"
},
{
"id": "8060189",
"title": "1920–21 Northern Rugby Football Union season",
"text": " The 1920–21 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the 26th season of rugby league football.",
"score": "1.8673452"
},
{
"id": "9035047",
"title": "1923–24 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1923–24 Northern Football League season was the 31st in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "1.8520055"
},
{
"id": "9006052",
"title": "2020–21 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 2020–21 Northern Football League season was the 123rd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in England. The league has operated two divisions in the English football league system, Division One at step 5, and Division Two at step 6. The allocations for Steps 5 and 6 for season 2020–21 were announced by the FA on 21 July, and were subject to appeal. Due to the restrictions on clubs' ability to play matches in the COVID-19 lockdowns, competitions at Steps 3–6 were curtailed on 24 February 2021. The scheduled restructuring of non-league took place at the end of the season, with a new division added to the Northern Premier League at Step 4 for 2021–22, resulting in three Northern League clubs' promotions to that league.",
"score": "1.8470219"
},
{
"id": "9269816",
"title": "1925–26 Northern Football League",
"text": " The league featured 14 clubs which competed in the last season, no new clubs joined the league this season.",
"score": "1.838121"
},
{
"id": "9269815",
"title": "1925–26 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1925–26 Northern Football League season was the 33rd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "1.8341391"
},
{
"id": "9035061",
"title": "1924–25 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1924–25 Northern Football League season was the 32nd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "1.8177278"
},
{
"id": "9035062",
"title": "1924–25 Northern Football League",
"text": " The league featured 15 clubs which competed in the last season, no new clubs joined the league this season.",
"score": "1.8100193"
},
{
"id": "8060193",
"title": "1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season",
"text": " The 1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the 27th season of rugby league football.",
"score": "1.7932174"
},
{
"id": "435755",
"title": "1964–65 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1964–65 Northern Football League season was the 68th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England.",
"score": "1.7928451"
},
{
"id": "3370074",
"title": "1981–82 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1981–82 Northern Football League season was the 84th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England. At the end of the season the Northern League expanded to two divisions for the first time since 1899–1900.",
"score": "1.792095"
},
{
"id": "7909422",
"title": "Northern Ireland Football League",
"text": " Fusiliers in 1891–92; the North Staffordshire Regiment for three seasons from 1896–99; the Royal Scots in 1899–00 and the King's Own Scottish Borderers in 1903–04. Only five and six clubs competed in 1920–21 and from 1921–23 respectively, but expansion began with the admission of four new clubs in 1923, another two in 1924 and a further two in 1927, giving a membership of fourteen from 1927 until the League was suspended in 1940 because of the Second World War. When the League resumed in 1947 it was reduced to twelve clubs, and stayed at this number until 1983 when membership was increased to fourteen. In 1990, a further two clubs brought the membership to ",
"score": "1.7803392"
},
{
"id": "14032296",
"title": "Northern Football League (Scotland)",
"text": " The Northern League was a regional Scottish football competition held between 1891 and 1920. In 1908–09, six clubs left to form the Central Football League and the league shut down for the First World War, returning for a final season in 1919–20. Dundee 'A' won the title five times, also sharing it on a sixth occasion.",
"score": "1.7795317"
},
{
"id": "8396246",
"title": "1912–13 Northern Football League",
"text": " The 1912–13 Northern Football League season was the 24th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"score": "1.7770927"
}
] | [
"1920–21 Northern Football League\n The 1920–21 Northern Football League season was the 28th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"1921–22 Northern Football League\n The 1921–22 Northern Football League season was the 29th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"1920–21 Northern Football League\nTow Law Town ; Langley Park The league featured 12 clubs which competed in the last season, along with two new clubs:",
"1922–23 Northern Football League\n The 1922–23 Northern Football League season was the 30th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"1919–20 Northern Football League\n The 1919–20 Northern Football League season was the 27th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England. South Bank were crowned champions via a three team playoff after they finished the season on 38 points along with Bishop Auckland and Crook Town.",
"1921–22 Northern Football League\nCockfield The league featured 13 clubs which competed in the last season, along with one new club:",
"1922–23 Northern Football League\nLoftus Albion The league featured 13 clubs which competed in the last season, along with one new club:",
"1920–21 Northern Rugby Football Union season\n The 1920–21 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the 26th season of rugby league football.",
"1923–24 Northern Football League\n The 1923–24 Northern Football League season was the 31st in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"2020–21 Northern Football League\n The 2020–21 Northern Football League season was the 123rd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in England. The league has operated two divisions in the English football league system, Division One at step 5, and Division Two at step 6. The allocations for Steps 5 and 6 for season 2020–21 were announced by the FA on 21 July, and were subject to appeal. Due to the restrictions on clubs' ability to play matches in the COVID-19 lockdowns, competitions at Steps 3–6 were curtailed on 24 February 2021. The scheduled restructuring of non-league took place at the end of the season, with a new division added to the Northern Premier League at Step 4 for 2021–22, resulting in three Northern League clubs' promotions to that league.",
"1925–26 Northern Football League\n The league featured 14 clubs which competed in the last season, no new clubs joined the league this season.",
"1925–26 Northern Football League\n The 1925–26 Northern Football League season was the 33rd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"1924–25 Northern Football League\n The 1924–25 Northern Football League season was the 32nd in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England.",
"1924–25 Northern Football League\n The league featured 15 clubs which competed in the last season, no new clubs joined the league this season.",
"1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season\n The 1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the 27th season of rugby league football.",
"1964–65 Northern Football League\n The 1964–65 Northern Football League season was the 68th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England.",
"1981–82 Northern Football League\n The 1981–82 Northern Football League season was the 84th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England. At the end of the season the Northern League expanded to two divisions for the first time since 1899–1900.",
"Northern Ireland Football League\n Fusiliers in 1891–92; the North Staffordshire Regiment for three seasons from 1896–99; the Royal Scots in 1899–00 and the King's Own Scottish Borderers in 1903–04. Only five and six clubs competed in 1920–21 and from 1921–23 respectively, but expansion began with the admission of four new clubs in 1923, another two in 1924 and a further two in 1927, giving a membership of fourteen from 1927 until the League was suspended in 1940 because of the Second World War. When the League resumed in 1947 it was reduced to twelve clubs, and stayed at this number until 1983 when membership was increased to fourteen. In 1990, a further two clubs brought the membership to ",
"Northern Football League (Scotland)\n The Northern League was a regional Scottish football competition held between 1891 and 1920. In 1908–09, six clubs left to form the Central Football League and the league shut down for the First World War, returning for a final season in 1919–20. Dundee 'A' won the title five times, also sharing it on a sixth occasion.",
"1912–13 Northern Football League\n The 1912–13 Northern Football League season was the 24th in the history of the Northern Football League, a football competition in Northern England."
] |
What sport does Nelson Semperena play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Nelson Semperena | 5,269,520 | 23 | [
{
"id": "28150694",
"title": "Nelson (given name)",
"text": " 1971), American minister ; Nélson Semedo (born 1993), Portuguese footballer ; Nelson Semperena (born 1984), Uruguayan footballer ; Nelson Senkatuka (born 1997), Ugandan footballer ; Nelson Rodríguez Serna (born 1965), Colombian cyclist ; Nelson Serrano (born 1938), Ecuadorian businessman ; Nelson Setimani (born 1990), South African cricketer ; Nelson Sewankambo (born 1952), Ugandan physician ; Nelson Shanks (1937–2015), American painter ; Nelson Sharpe (1858–1935), American judge ; Nelson Shin (born 1939), Korean film executive ; Nelson Shoemaker (1911–2003), Canadian politician ; Nelson Simmons (born 1963), American baseball player ; Nelson Sing (born 1995), Timorese footballer ; Nelson Skalbania (born 1938), Canadian engineer ",
"score": "1.5879682"
},
{
"id": "27449965",
"title": "Edder Nelson",
"text": " On May 29, 2012 Nelson signed a 1-year long contract with Cartaginés. Nelson made his debut for Cartaginés in the opening match in the Winter 2012, against Belén Siglo XXI playing the whole game. On 7 August, Nelson made assistance for the tie against Limón in Cartaginés 1-2 victory, after Hansell Arauz recovered the ball in 3/4 of field, passes to Nelson, running and leaves two opponents to make an assistance to Erick Ponce. On 28 October, Nelson created a play of a wall with Randall Alvarado, made attendance goal to Paolo Jimenez, in the game who lost Cartaginés 1-3 against C.D. Saprissa. On 7 November, he made a goal assisted by Eduardo Valverde in the game who lost Cartaginés 2-3 against C.S. Herediano. In January 2013, Nelson quit Cartaginés because he did not want to play out of his favoured defensive position and joined Saprissa on loan for a year. He moved to Pérez Zeledón only a few months later.",
"score": "1.5765538"
},
{
"id": "9747115",
"title": "Shayni Buswell",
"text": " In Hockey WA's Premier League competition, Nelson plays for the University of Western Australia. In 2019, Nelson reached a career milestone and club record of 350 Premier League games.",
"score": "1.5289879"
},
{
"id": "2124521",
"title": "Maximo Nelson",
"text": " Nelson played baseball in the Dominican from 2001 to 2003. In 2004, he signed with the New York Yankees, and posted a 6-3 win-loss record of the GCL Yankees in 2004. Nelson was subsequently deported and banned from reentering the United States after being involved in a marriage-for-visa scam. Nelson played for the Modi'in Miracle of the Israel Baseball League. In 2008, Nelson signed with Chunichi Dragons.",
"score": "1.5161626"
},
{
"id": "26820242",
"title": "Matthew Nelson (soccer)",
"text": " Nelson attended Lynn University, playing on the men's soccer team from 1996 to 1999. He compiled thirty-one shutouts and forty-nine wins in fifty-nine games. He was a 1999 NSCAA Division II Scholar All American. Nelson graduated with a bachelor's degree in international business. In 2000, Nelson began his post-collegiate career with the Cape Cod Crusaders of the USISL D3-Pro League. That season, he earned D2-Pro League Goalkeeper of the Year honors after posting a 0.73 goals against average. After the Crusaders were eliminated from the playoffs, Nelson joined the Boston Bulldogs of the USL A-League for three games, allowing only one goal. The Columbus Crew then called him up for ",
"score": "1.5143688"
},
{
"id": "32381109",
"title": "Nelson Erazo (athlete)",
"text": "Academia Cristiana Yarah, Toa Alta P.R. ; Escuela Superior Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra, Bayamón P.R. ",
"score": "1.509588"
},
{
"id": "30594822",
"title": "Nélson Semedo",
"text": " Semedo is mainly known for his speed, ball control, dribbling and holding on the ball.",
"score": "1.5078114"
},
{
"id": "4380349",
"title": "Ed Nelson (basketball)",
"text": " In the summer 2007, Nelson had NBA workouts with Memphis Grizzlies, New Orleans Hornets and Toronto Raptors. In 2009, he played for Estudiantes de Bahía Blanca in the Liga Nacional de Básquet (Argentine first division), where he was the teammate of former NBA point guard Pepe Sánchez. Nelson was the leading scorer of the Liga Nacional de Básquet in the 2008–09 season, averaging 20.1 points per game and 8.4 rebounds per game. He played one season for Regatas, one for Quilmes de Mar del Plata, and one more in Bahía Basket, before becoming a player of Gimnasia Indalo.",
"score": "1.5057216"
},
{
"id": "9235869",
"title": "Sa'eed Nelson",
"text": " Nelson is the son of Jeffery Nelson and grew up in Pleasantville, New Jersey. His favorite basketball player growing up was Kobe Bryant. He mainly focused on playing football before high school, and he was a big Philadelphia Eagles fan. Nelson attended St. Augustine Prep, where he was coached by Paul Rodio. Nelson stood 5'5 as a freshman. As a junior, Nelson averaged 18.5 points and 7.8 assists per game and led the team to a 27–2 record. In his senior season, Nelson hit the clinching shot and free throw in a 58–55 win against Christian Brothers Academy in the Battle by the Bay. In the Non-Public A title game, he scored 30 points in a 83–50 win against Don Bosco Preparatory High School. Nelson was a two-time Press of Atlantic City player of the year and finished his career with 1,625 points, third highest in school history. Despite averaging 20 points per game as a senior, Nelson was not highly recruited, as most of his scholarship offers came from Patriot League schools, and he was rated a one-star recruit by ESPN. He committed to American on October 5, 2015.",
"score": "1.5039959"
},
{
"id": "3375299",
"title": "Juan Nelson",
"text": " Juan Diego Nelson (26 May 1891 – 7 August 1985 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) was an Olympic Argentinian polo player during the first half of the 20th century. He is listed in the Argentinian polo team roster for the 1924 Summer Olympics which won the gold medal that year. In the 1936 Summer Olympics, although he was once again part of the team Nelson is not listed as a medallist; he was the 'non-playing captain' of the team. Nevertheless, it is sometimes implied that Nelson was the first Argentinian to have won two Olympic gold medals. In 2008, Javier Mascherano became the second Argentine to win two Olympic gold medals.",
"score": "1.4871767"
},
{
"id": "568535",
"title": "Bob Nelson (defensive tackle)",
"text": " For the former linebacker, see Bob Nelson (linebacker) Robert William Nelson (born March 3, 1959) is a retired American football nose tackle who played in the National Football League. He played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for one season and the Green Bay Packers for two seasons. Prior to entering the NFL, Nelson had a stint with the Arizona Outlaws of the USFL. Nelson played college football at the University of Miami (Florida). Nelson gained a bit of fame in the early 1990s through his inclusion in the Nintendo home video game \"Tecmo Super Bowl.\" Nelson was among the most dominant defensive players in the game, even though he played as a nose tackle, a position in which the primary responsibility is to occupy offensive linemen to allow other defensive players to make tackles. Nelson's speed in the game enabled him to make a sack on nearly every play as a human-controlled player. As a result, players of Tecmo Super Bowl frequently agree not to use the play. He is undisputedly the GOAT among video game defenders.",
"score": "1.482023"
},
{
"id": "26350478",
"title": "Buck Quartermain",
"text": " Born in Tampa, Florida, Seguine attended Westmore College playing college football, basketball and baseball becoming a three sport letterman before his graduation. He later played as a defensive back for Jacksonville State University before making the third round draft by the Toronto Argonauts.",
"score": "1.4811584"
},
{
"id": "3090546",
"title": "Alexi Salamone",
"text": " Salamone was introduced to ice sports by the Skating Association for the Blind and Handicapped (S.A.B.A.H.). He has been a member of the U.S. national sledge hockey team since 2003, twice representing his country at the Winter Paralympics. At the 2006 Winter Paralympics in Turin, Italy, Salamone was part of the American team that won the bronze medal. The United States featured in Group B of the tournament and won two of their three group games; 3–0 against Japan and 6–1 over Sweden. A 1–2 defeat in the match against Germany meant the USA faced Group A winners Norway in the semi-finals. The team lost that match 2–4 ",
"score": "1.4777198"
},
{
"id": "5229278",
"title": "Laurent Sempéré",
"text": " Laurent Sempéré (born 9 July 1985) is a French rugby union coach and former player, he is currently the co-head coach of Stade Français in the Top 14 with Julien Arias. His position was Hooker. He began his career with USA Perpignan before moving to Racing Métro 92 in 2006. He then moved across Paris to Stade Français in 2008.",
"score": "1.4774806"
},
{
"id": "8019132",
"title": "Nelson San Martín",
"text": " The former Universidad de Chile midfielder who began to pitch his tent in Alor Star in November 2006 has been playing an influential role for Kedah FA. He excels in his role as the playmaker of the team with his accurate distribution of the ball. In his first year at his new club, he managed to capture the eyes of most Kedah FA fans with his superb passing and vision, and also with an excellent free kick delivery. Alongside his teammates, Ahmad Fauzi Saari, Marlon Alex James, Mohd Khyril Muhymeen Zambri, they played the most attractive football in Malaysia. Two years playing for the Canaries, Nelson assisted them to win ",
"score": "1.475552"
},
{
"id": "27449964",
"title": "Edder Nelson",
"text": " He played the 2009 second division final for Municipal Grecia and later played for Puntarenas. In January 2012, Nelson signed a 6-month contract with Slovakian side Senica but he did not pass a medical.",
"score": "1.4731498"
},
{
"id": "28150693",
"title": "Nelson (given name)",
"text": "Nélson Saavedra (born 1988), Chilean footballer ; Nelson Saenz (born 1965), Cuban taekwondo practitioner ; Nelson Saiers, American artist and mathematician ; Nelson Saldana, American cyclist ; Nélson Sampaio (born 1992), Portuguese footballer ; Nelson Ponce Sánchez (born 1975), Cuban illustrator ; Nelson San Martín (born 1980), Chilean footballer ; Nelson Santovenia (born 1961), American baseball player ; Nelson Sardelli (born 1934), Italian-Brazilian comedian ; Nelson Sardenberg (born 1970), Brazilian karate fighter ; Nelson Sardinha (born 1966), Angolan basketball player ; Nelson Sargento (1924–2021), Brazilian musician ; Nelson Saúte (born 1967), Mozambican writer ; Nelson Schwenke (??–2012), Chilean singer ; Nelson Searcy ",
"score": "1.4697878"
},
{
"id": "5593052",
"title": "Ashleigh Nelson (field hockey)",
"text": " of the 2012 Summer Olympic squad and the gold medal winning squad at the 2014 Commonwealth Games. After retiring from international hockey in 2017, Nelson moved into a media career including as a commentator for the Epicentre.tv coverage of the Australian Hockey League finals in 2017. She currently works as a Sports Reporter for Channel 10 news after completing a Diploma in Media at Edith Cowan University. Nelson grew up in Wagin, in rural Western Australia, where she began playing hockey at the age of 5. She attended boarding school at Santa Maria College for her high school years and was honoured with the title of Head Girl of the college in 2004. She graduated from Curtin University 2010 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Occupational Therapy.",
"score": "1.4651738"
},
{
"id": "27161810",
"title": "África Sempere",
"text": " África Sempere Herrera (born 25 September 1992) is a Spanish handballer for CB Atlético Guardés and the Spanish national team. When she was a little girl, she overcame a leukemia.",
"score": "1.4640434"
},
{
"id": "28150695",
"title": "Nelson (given name)",
"text": " Nelson Solórzano (born 1959), Venezuelan basketball player ; Nelson Sossa (born 1986), Bolivian footballer ; Nelson Soto (born 1963), Chilean footballer and manager ; Nelson Soto (cyclist) (born 1994), Colombian cyclist ; Nelson Spencer (1876–1943), Canadian merchant ; Nelson Spruce (born 1992), American football player ; Nelson Stacy (1921–1986), American race car driver ; Nelson Stokley (1944–2010), American football player ; Nelson Stoll, American sound engineer ; Nelson Stone (born 1984), Papua New Guinean runner ; Nelson Story (1838–1926), American rancher ; Nelson Story Jr. (1878–1932), American politician ; Nelson Suárez (born 1956), Ecuadorian diver ; Nelson Sullivan (1948–1989), American videographer ",
"score": "1.4590414"
}
] | [
"Nelson (given name)\n 1971), American minister ; Nélson Semedo (born 1993), Portuguese footballer ; Nelson Semperena (born 1984), Uruguayan footballer ; Nelson Senkatuka (born 1997), Ugandan footballer ; Nelson Rodríguez Serna (born 1965), Colombian cyclist ; Nelson Serrano (born 1938), Ecuadorian businessman ; Nelson Setimani (born 1990), South African cricketer ; Nelson Sewankambo (born 1952), Ugandan physician ; Nelson Shanks (1937–2015), American painter ; Nelson Sharpe (1858–1935), American judge ; Nelson Shin (born 1939), Korean film executive ; Nelson Shoemaker (1911–2003), Canadian politician ; Nelson Simmons (born 1963), American baseball player ; Nelson Sing (born 1995), Timorese footballer ; Nelson Skalbania (born 1938), Canadian engineer ",
"Edder Nelson\n On May 29, 2012 Nelson signed a 1-year long contract with Cartaginés. Nelson made his debut for Cartaginés in the opening match in the Winter 2012, against Belén Siglo XXI playing the whole game. On 7 August, Nelson made assistance for the tie against Limón in Cartaginés 1-2 victory, after Hansell Arauz recovered the ball in 3/4 of field, passes to Nelson, running and leaves two opponents to make an assistance to Erick Ponce. On 28 October, Nelson created a play of a wall with Randall Alvarado, made attendance goal to Paolo Jimenez, in the game who lost Cartaginés 1-3 against C.D. Saprissa. On 7 November, he made a goal assisted by Eduardo Valverde in the game who lost Cartaginés 2-3 against C.S. Herediano. In January 2013, Nelson quit Cartaginés because he did not want to play out of his favoured defensive position and joined Saprissa on loan for a year. He moved to Pérez Zeledón only a few months later.",
"Shayni Buswell\n In Hockey WA's Premier League competition, Nelson plays for the University of Western Australia. In 2019, Nelson reached a career milestone and club record of 350 Premier League games.",
"Maximo Nelson\n Nelson played baseball in the Dominican from 2001 to 2003. In 2004, he signed with the New York Yankees, and posted a 6-3 win-loss record of the GCL Yankees in 2004. Nelson was subsequently deported and banned from reentering the United States after being involved in a marriage-for-visa scam. Nelson played for the Modi'in Miracle of the Israel Baseball League. In 2008, Nelson signed with Chunichi Dragons.",
"Matthew Nelson (soccer)\n Nelson attended Lynn University, playing on the men's soccer team from 1996 to 1999. He compiled thirty-one shutouts and forty-nine wins in fifty-nine games. He was a 1999 NSCAA Division II Scholar All American. Nelson graduated with a bachelor's degree in international business. In 2000, Nelson began his post-collegiate career with the Cape Cod Crusaders of the USISL D3-Pro League. That season, he earned D2-Pro League Goalkeeper of the Year honors after posting a 0.73 goals against average. After the Crusaders were eliminated from the playoffs, Nelson joined the Boston Bulldogs of the USL A-League for three games, allowing only one goal. The Columbus Crew then called him up for ",
"Nelson Erazo (athlete)\nAcademia Cristiana Yarah, Toa Alta P.R. ; Escuela Superior Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra, Bayamón P.R. ",
"Nélson Semedo\n Semedo is mainly known for his speed, ball control, dribbling and holding on the ball.",
"Ed Nelson (basketball)\n In the summer 2007, Nelson had NBA workouts with Memphis Grizzlies, New Orleans Hornets and Toronto Raptors. In 2009, he played for Estudiantes de Bahía Blanca in the Liga Nacional de Básquet (Argentine first division), where he was the teammate of former NBA point guard Pepe Sánchez. Nelson was the leading scorer of the Liga Nacional de Básquet in the 2008–09 season, averaging 20.1 points per game and 8.4 rebounds per game. He played one season for Regatas, one for Quilmes de Mar del Plata, and one more in Bahía Basket, before becoming a player of Gimnasia Indalo.",
"Sa'eed Nelson\n Nelson is the son of Jeffery Nelson and grew up in Pleasantville, New Jersey. His favorite basketball player growing up was Kobe Bryant. He mainly focused on playing football before high school, and he was a big Philadelphia Eagles fan. Nelson attended St. Augustine Prep, where he was coached by Paul Rodio. Nelson stood 5'5 as a freshman. As a junior, Nelson averaged 18.5 points and 7.8 assists per game and led the team to a 27–2 record. In his senior season, Nelson hit the clinching shot and free throw in a 58–55 win against Christian Brothers Academy in the Battle by the Bay. In the Non-Public A title game, he scored 30 points in a 83–50 win against Don Bosco Preparatory High School. Nelson was a two-time Press of Atlantic City player of the year and finished his career with 1,625 points, third highest in school history. Despite averaging 20 points per game as a senior, Nelson was not highly recruited, as most of his scholarship offers came from Patriot League schools, and he was rated a one-star recruit by ESPN. He committed to American on October 5, 2015.",
"Juan Nelson\n Juan Diego Nelson (26 May 1891 – 7 August 1985 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) was an Olympic Argentinian polo player during the first half of the 20th century. He is listed in the Argentinian polo team roster for the 1924 Summer Olympics which won the gold medal that year. In the 1936 Summer Olympics, although he was once again part of the team Nelson is not listed as a medallist; he was the 'non-playing captain' of the team. Nevertheless, it is sometimes implied that Nelson was the first Argentinian to have won two Olympic gold medals. In 2008, Javier Mascherano became the second Argentine to win two Olympic gold medals.",
"Bob Nelson (defensive tackle)\n For the former linebacker, see Bob Nelson (linebacker) Robert William Nelson (born March 3, 1959) is a retired American football nose tackle who played in the National Football League. He played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for one season and the Green Bay Packers for two seasons. Prior to entering the NFL, Nelson had a stint with the Arizona Outlaws of the USFL. Nelson played college football at the University of Miami (Florida). Nelson gained a bit of fame in the early 1990s through his inclusion in the Nintendo home video game \"Tecmo Super Bowl.\" Nelson was among the most dominant defensive players in the game, even though he played as a nose tackle, a position in which the primary responsibility is to occupy offensive linemen to allow other defensive players to make tackles. Nelson's speed in the game enabled him to make a sack on nearly every play as a human-controlled player. As a result, players of Tecmo Super Bowl frequently agree not to use the play. He is undisputedly the GOAT among video game defenders.",
"Buck Quartermain\n Born in Tampa, Florida, Seguine attended Westmore College playing college football, basketball and baseball becoming a three sport letterman before his graduation. He later played as a defensive back for Jacksonville State University before making the third round draft by the Toronto Argonauts.",
"Alexi Salamone\n Salamone was introduced to ice sports by the Skating Association for the Blind and Handicapped (S.A.B.A.H.). He has been a member of the U.S. national sledge hockey team since 2003, twice representing his country at the Winter Paralympics. At the 2006 Winter Paralympics in Turin, Italy, Salamone was part of the American team that won the bronze medal. The United States featured in Group B of the tournament and won two of their three group games; 3–0 against Japan and 6–1 over Sweden. A 1–2 defeat in the match against Germany meant the USA faced Group A winners Norway in the semi-finals. The team lost that match 2–4 ",
"Laurent Sempéré\n Laurent Sempéré (born 9 July 1985) is a French rugby union coach and former player, he is currently the co-head coach of Stade Français in the Top 14 with Julien Arias. His position was Hooker. He began his career with USA Perpignan before moving to Racing Métro 92 in 2006. He then moved across Paris to Stade Français in 2008.",
"Nelson San Martín\n The former Universidad de Chile midfielder who began to pitch his tent in Alor Star in November 2006 has been playing an influential role for Kedah FA. He excels in his role as the playmaker of the team with his accurate distribution of the ball. In his first year at his new club, he managed to capture the eyes of most Kedah FA fans with his superb passing and vision, and also with an excellent free kick delivery. Alongside his teammates, Ahmad Fauzi Saari, Marlon Alex James, Mohd Khyril Muhymeen Zambri, they played the most attractive football in Malaysia. Two years playing for the Canaries, Nelson assisted them to win ",
"Edder Nelson\n He played the 2009 second division final for Municipal Grecia and later played for Puntarenas. In January 2012, Nelson signed a 6-month contract with Slovakian side Senica but he did not pass a medical.",
"Nelson (given name)\nNélson Saavedra (born 1988), Chilean footballer ; Nelson Saenz (born 1965), Cuban taekwondo practitioner ; Nelson Saiers, American artist and mathematician ; Nelson Saldana, American cyclist ; Nélson Sampaio (born 1992), Portuguese footballer ; Nelson Ponce Sánchez (born 1975), Cuban illustrator ; Nelson San Martín (born 1980), Chilean footballer ; Nelson Santovenia (born 1961), American baseball player ; Nelson Sardelli (born 1934), Italian-Brazilian comedian ; Nelson Sardenberg (born 1970), Brazilian karate fighter ; Nelson Sardinha (born 1966), Angolan basketball player ; Nelson Sargento (1924–2021), Brazilian musician ; Nelson Saúte (born 1967), Mozambican writer ; Nelson Schwenke (??–2012), Chilean singer ; Nelson Searcy ",
"Ashleigh Nelson (field hockey)\n of the 2012 Summer Olympic squad and the gold medal winning squad at the 2014 Commonwealth Games. After retiring from international hockey in 2017, Nelson moved into a media career including as a commentator for the Epicentre.tv coverage of the Australian Hockey League finals in 2017. She currently works as a Sports Reporter for Channel 10 news after completing a Diploma in Media at Edith Cowan University. Nelson grew up in Wagin, in rural Western Australia, where she began playing hockey at the age of 5. She attended boarding school at Santa Maria College for her high school years and was honoured with the title of Head Girl of the college in 2004. She graduated from Curtin University 2010 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Occupational Therapy.",
"África Sempere\n África Sempere Herrera (born 25 September 1992) is a Spanish handballer for CB Atlético Guardés and the Spanish national team. When she was a little girl, she overcame a leukemia.",
"Nelson (given name)\n Nelson Solórzano (born 1959), Venezuelan basketball player ; Nelson Sossa (born 1986), Bolivian footballer ; Nelson Soto (born 1963), Chilean footballer and manager ; Nelson Soto (cyclist) (born 1994), Colombian cyclist ; Nelson Spencer (1876–1943), Canadian merchant ; Nelson Spruce (born 1992), American football player ; Nelson Stacy (1921–1986), American race car driver ; Nelson Stokley (1944–2010), American football player ; Nelson Stoll, American sound engineer ; Nelson Stone (born 1984), Papua New Guinean runner ; Nelson Story (1838–1926), American rancher ; Nelson Story Jr. (1878–1932), American politician ; Nelson Suárez (born 1956), Ecuadorian diver ; Nelson Sullivan (1948–1989), American videographer "
] |
What sport does McPherson Meade play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | McPherson Meade | 5,131,889 | 44 | [
{
"id": "29628478",
"title": "McPherson Meade",
"text": " McPherson Meade (born 16 February 1979) is a West Indian cricketer. Meade is a right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break. He also plays football for the Montserrat football team as a goalkeeper. He was born on Montserrat. Meade appeared at Under-19 level for the Leeward Islands in 1997 and 1998, making a total of eight appearances for the team. Starting in 2004, Meade played club cricket in England for Chingford Cricket Club. In 2006, Montserrat were invited to take part in the 2006 Stanford 20/20, whose matches held official Twenty20 status. Meade made his Twenty20 debut for Montserrat in their first-round match against Guyana, with their first-class opponents winning the match by 8 wickets. Meade scored 21 runs opening the batting, before he was dismissed by Mahendra Nagamootoo. Meade continued to play club cricket in England for Chingford, who had by 2007 been promoted ",
"score": "1.8753682"
},
{
"id": "269328",
"title": "Bruce Meade",
"text": " Born in Bradenton, Florida, Bruce Meade did not play softball as a youth. Meade started roller skating at the age of 8 and won a regional championship for boys 18 and under in the freestyle category. He was also on his high school track team and competed in High Jump and Pole Vault.",
"score": "1.680556"
},
{
"id": "9439288",
"title": "Jim Meade",
"text": " James Gordon Meade Jr. (February 28, 1914 – August 7, 1977) was an American football player and coach and college athletics administrator. He played professionally as a halfback in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins from 1939 to 1945. Meade played college football and lacrosse at the University of Maryland. After serving as a paratrooper in World War II, Meade was the backfield coach for the football team at Furman University from 1946 to 1951. He was also the school's athletic director from 1949 to 1951. Meade later helped to create the Peachtree City Recreation Department and was a board member of the McIntosh Arts Council in Peachtree City, Georgia. Meade was inducted into the University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame in 1982.",
"score": "1.6526835"
},
{
"id": "29628479",
"title": "McPherson Meade",
"text": " the Essex Premier League. In January 2008, Montserrat were invited to part in the 2008 Stanford 20/20, where Meade made two further Twenty20 appearances, in a preliminary round match against the Turks and Caicos Islands and in a first round match against Nevis. Against the Turks and Caicos Islands, he took the wickets of Henry Saunders and Chabbie Charlery, finishing with figures of 2/10 from four overs. He wasn't required to bat in Montserrat's nine wicket victory. Against Nevis, he took the wickets of Runako Morton and Joel Simmonds to finish with figures of 2/22 from four overs. In Montserrat's unsuccessful chase, he was dismissed for 9 runs by Tonito Willett. Later in 2008, he played for Chingford in the Essex Premier League, making seven appearances during the season. He continues to play minor matches for Montserrat and is the current captain of the team.",
"score": "1.6089551"
},
{
"id": "269327",
"title": "Bruce Meade",
"text": " Bruce Allen Meade (born c. 1951) is an inductee of both the Independent Softball Association Hall of Fame and the United States Slo-pitch Softball Association Hall of Fame. Meade has also been named to the All-World Tournament Team seven times. During his career, he appeared in nine ISA Super Major World Tournaments and three Senior World Tournaments.",
"score": "1.6054018"
},
{
"id": "31510581",
"title": "Ellen Meade",
"text": " Bruce Meade, Ellen Meade's older brother, was inducted into the Independent Softball Association Hall of Fame in the Male Player Category in Fort Myers Beach, Florida. He has also been named to the All-World Tournament Team seven times. During his career, Bruce Meade appeared in nine ISA Super Major World Tournaments and three Senior World Tournaments.",
"score": "1.5921628"
},
{
"id": "5734683",
"title": "Skylar Meade",
"text": " Skylar Meade (born September 10, 1984) is an American baseball coach who is currently the head coach at Troy University.",
"score": "1.5892804"
},
{
"id": "31178887",
"title": "Luke Meade",
"text": " Meade first came to prominence as a hurler with the Hamilton High School in Bandon. Having played at every grade, he was at midfield on the school's senior team that won the O'Callaghan Cup in 2014 and contested the Harty Cup.",
"score": "1.5803463"
},
{
"id": "8159527",
"title": "Aaron Meade",
"text": " Meade attended Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Missouri, where he played for the school's baseball team. As a senior, he pitched in the All-Missouri East/West All-Star Game. After high school, Meade signed to play college baseball for the Missouri State Bears. In 2009, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League and was named a league all-star.",
"score": "1.5799353"
},
{
"id": "269330",
"title": "Bruce Meade",
"text": " Meade is best known for hitting a regulation softball (Dudley SB12L red stitch) 510 feet in Amarillo, Texas, in 1978. The distance was documented by an American Softball Association official who was in attendance.",
"score": "1.5734665"
},
{
"id": "1175950",
"title": "Corbin McPherson",
"text": " McPherson attended Colgate University where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I ice hockey with the Colgate Raiders. In his senior year he was named as one of the team's three captains for the 2011–12 season. On March 20, 2012, the Albany Devils of the American Hockey League signed McPherson to an amateur tryout agreement. He played the next two seasons in Albany, posting a +16 rating to lead the team during the 2013–14 AHL season. On July 4, 2014, the New Jersey Devils rewarded McPherson with his first NHL deal, agreeing on a one-year, two-way contract. Following the 2015–16 season, McPherson announced his retirement from professional hockey after four seasons.",
"score": "1.5733886"
},
{
"id": "32609132",
"title": "Charlene Todman",
"text": " in archery, swimming and table tennis. Meade was one of five women making up the New South Wales team, with all seeking qualification for the 1966 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games. While raising her two children, she was swimming competitively in 1968. At the 1970 edition of the Stoke Mandeville Games, she won 7 medals. She also competed at the Royal North Shore Hospital Paraplegic Games. Competing at the 1972 National Paraplegic and Quad Games in Holroyd, she participated in the final of the women's 4 x 60 m relay for the New South Wales team along with J. Stokes, C. Kirby and G. Milburn; ",
"score": "1.5692114"
},
{
"id": "31178888",
"title": "Luke Meade",
"text": " As a student at Mary Immaculate College, Meade joined the college senior team during his second year of studies. In 2017 he was at left corner-forward as Mary Immaculate College retained the Fitzgibbon Cup title following a 3-24 to 1-19 defeat of the Institute of Technology, Carlow.",
"score": "1.5585363"
},
{
"id": "11167984",
"title": "Daniel McPherson",
"text": " Daniel McPherson (born 5 July 1975) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the Sydney Swans in the Australian Football League. Originally from Matong, a small town in New South Wales, McPherson played for the Swans between 1994 and 2003. He has served as the forward coach of the Melbourne Football Club since October 2013. After retiring from playing, he turned to coaching, leading North Shore Australian Football Club in the Sydney AFL in 2005. He then joined the Sydney coaching staff and coached the Sydney reserves in the AFL Canberra league in 2010.",
"score": "1.5575023"
},
{
"id": "853937",
"title": "Adrian McPherson",
"text": " McPherson is a former Florida Mr. Basketball and Mr. Football Florida (the first athlete to have awarded both honors in Florida history) as a student at Southeast High School in Bradenton, Florida, He began his career at Florida State playing quarterback on the football team and point guard on the basketball team after attending Southeast High School in Bradenton, Florida, where he was named Gatorade Florida Football Player of the season, passing for 3,728 yards and 42 touchdowns and rushing for 765 yards and 10 touchdowns as a senior at Southeast. Additionally, he played third base for his American Legion baseball team, which won a state championship in the summer of 2002.",
"score": "1.5571985"
},
{
"id": "7745365",
"title": "Peter McPherson (soccer)",
"text": " Outside of football, McPherson works as a Physical Education teacher. His other interests include tennis, golf and cricket.",
"score": "1.5553508"
},
{
"id": "30671855",
"title": "Shannan McPherson",
"text": " McPherson was a Souths Junior and played for South Eastern Seagulls growing up.",
"score": "1.5493065"
},
{
"id": "31917919",
"title": "Brian Meade",
"text": " Brian Meade is a Gaelic footballer who plays for the Meath county team. Meade plays for Midfield position his local club Rathkenny and for Meath senior team since being called up in 2007 by former footballer and manager Colm Coyle.",
"score": "1.5492432"
},
{
"id": "32322529",
"title": "Meade Senior High School",
"text": " The Meade Mustangs participate in a variety of sports, including:",
"score": "1.5425267"
},
{
"id": "14730683",
"title": "Kyle McPherson",
"text": " Prior to playing professionally, McPherson attended St. Paul's Episcopal School in Mobile, Alabama, Faulkner State Community College, and then the University of Mobile.",
"score": "1.5420842"
}
] | [
"McPherson Meade\n McPherson Meade (born 16 February 1979) is a West Indian cricketer. Meade is a right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break. He also plays football for the Montserrat football team as a goalkeeper. He was born on Montserrat. Meade appeared at Under-19 level for the Leeward Islands in 1997 and 1998, making a total of eight appearances for the team. Starting in 2004, Meade played club cricket in England for Chingford Cricket Club. In 2006, Montserrat were invited to take part in the 2006 Stanford 20/20, whose matches held official Twenty20 status. Meade made his Twenty20 debut for Montserrat in their first-round match against Guyana, with their first-class opponents winning the match by 8 wickets. Meade scored 21 runs opening the batting, before he was dismissed by Mahendra Nagamootoo. Meade continued to play club cricket in England for Chingford, who had by 2007 been promoted ",
"Bruce Meade\n Born in Bradenton, Florida, Bruce Meade did not play softball as a youth. Meade started roller skating at the age of 8 and won a regional championship for boys 18 and under in the freestyle category. He was also on his high school track team and competed in High Jump and Pole Vault.",
"Jim Meade\n James Gordon Meade Jr. (February 28, 1914 – August 7, 1977) was an American football player and coach and college athletics administrator. He played professionally as a halfback in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins from 1939 to 1945. Meade played college football and lacrosse at the University of Maryland. After serving as a paratrooper in World War II, Meade was the backfield coach for the football team at Furman University from 1946 to 1951. He was also the school's athletic director from 1949 to 1951. Meade later helped to create the Peachtree City Recreation Department and was a board member of the McIntosh Arts Council in Peachtree City, Georgia. Meade was inducted into the University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame in 1982.",
"McPherson Meade\n the Essex Premier League. In January 2008, Montserrat were invited to part in the 2008 Stanford 20/20, where Meade made two further Twenty20 appearances, in a preliminary round match against the Turks and Caicos Islands and in a first round match against Nevis. Against the Turks and Caicos Islands, he took the wickets of Henry Saunders and Chabbie Charlery, finishing with figures of 2/10 from four overs. He wasn't required to bat in Montserrat's nine wicket victory. Against Nevis, he took the wickets of Runako Morton and Joel Simmonds to finish with figures of 2/22 from four overs. In Montserrat's unsuccessful chase, he was dismissed for 9 runs by Tonito Willett. Later in 2008, he played for Chingford in the Essex Premier League, making seven appearances during the season. He continues to play minor matches for Montserrat and is the current captain of the team.",
"Bruce Meade\n Bruce Allen Meade (born c. 1951) is an inductee of both the Independent Softball Association Hall of Fame and the United States Slo-pitch Softball Association Hall of Fame. Meade has also been named to the All-World Tournament Team seven times. During his career, he appeared in nine ISA Super Major World Tournaments and three Senior World Tournaments.",
"Ellen Meade\n Bruce Meade, Ellen Meade's older brother, was inducted into the Independent Softball Association Hall of Fame in the Male Player Category in Fort Myers Beach, Florida. He has also been named to the All-World Tournament Team seven times. During his career, Bruce Meade appeared in nine ISA Super Major World Tournaments and three Senior World Tournaments.",
"Skylar Meade\n Skylar Meade (born September 10, 1984) is an American baseball coach who is currently the head coach at Troy University.",
"Luke Meade\n Meade first came to prominence as a hurler with the Hamilton High School in Bandon. Having played at every grade, he was at midfield on the school's senior team that won the O'Callaghan Cup in 2014 and contested the Harty Cup.",
"Aaron Meade\n Meade attended Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Missouri, where he played for the school's baseball team. As a senior, he pitched in the All-Missouri East/West All-Star Game. After high school, Meade signed to play college baseball for the Missouri State Bears. In 2009, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League and was named a league all-star.",
"Bruce Meade\n Meade is best known for hitting a regulation softball (Dudley SB12L red stitch) 510 feet in Amarillo, Texas, in 1978. The distance was documented by an American Softball Association official who was in attendance.",
"Corbin McPherson\n McPherson attended Colgate University where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I ice hockey with the Colgate Raiders. In his senior year he was named as one of the team's three captains for the 2011–12 season. On March 20, 2012, the Albany Devils of the American Hockey League signed McPherson to an amateur tryout agreement. He played the next two seasons in Albany, posting a +16 rating to lead the team during the 2013–14 AHL season. On July 4, 2014, the New Jersey Devils rewarded McPherson with his first NHL deal, agreeing on a one-year, two-way contract. Following the 2015–16 season, McPherson announced his retirement from professional hockey after four seasons.",
"Charlene Todman\n in archery, swimming and table tennis. Meade was one of five women making up the New South Wales team, with all seeking qualification for the 1966 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games. While raising her two children, she was swimming competitively in 1968. At the 1970 edition of the Stoke Mandeville Games, she won 7 medals. She also competed at the Royal North Shore Hospital Paraplegic Games. Competing at the 1972 National Paraplegic and Quad Games in Holroyd, she participated in the final of the women's 4 x 60 m relay for the New South Wales team along with J. Stokes, C. Kirby and G. Milburn; ",
"Luke Meade\n As a student at Mary Immaculate College, Meade joined the college senior team during his second year of studies. In 2017 he was at left corner-forward as Mary Immaculate College retained the Fitzgibbon Cup title following a 3-24 to 1-19 defeat of the Institute of Technology, Carlow.",
"Daniel McPherson\n Daniel McPherson (born 5 July 1975) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the Sydney Swans in the Australian Football League. Originally from Matong, a small town in New South Wales, McPherson played for the Swans between 1994 and 2003. He has served as the forward coach of the Melbourne Football Club since October 2013. After retiring from playing, he turned to coaching, leading North Shore Australian Football Club in the Sydney AFL in 2005. He then joined the Sydney coaching staff and coached the Sydney reserves in the AFL Canberra league in 2010.",
"Adrian McPherson\n McPherson is a former Florida Mr. Basketball and Mr. Football Florida (the first athlete to have awarded both honors in Florida history) as a student at Southeast High School in Bradenton, Florida, He began his career at Florida State playing quarterback on the football team and point guard on the basketball team after attending Southeast High School in Bradenton, Florida, where he was named Gatorade Florida Football Player of the season, passing for 3,728 yards and 42 touchdowns and rushing for 765 yards and 10 touchdowns as a senior at Southeast. Additionally, he played third base for his American Legion baseball team, which won a state championship in the summer of 2002.",
"Peter McPherson (soccer)\n Outside of football, McPherson works as a Physical Education teacher. His other interests include tennis, golf and cricket.",
"Shannan McPherson\n McPherson was a Souths Junior and played for South Eastern Seagulls growing up.",
"Brian Meade\n Brian Meade is a Gaelic footballer who plays for the Meath county team. Meade plays for Midfield position his local club Rathkenny and for Meath senior team since being called up in 2007 by former footballer and manager Colm Coyle.",
"Meade Senior High School\n The Meade Mustangs participate in a variety of sports, including:",
"Kyle McPherson\n Prior to playing professionally, McPherson attended St. Paul's Episcopal School in Mobile, Alabama, Faulkner State Community College, and then the University of Mobile."
] |
What sport does Université Nationale du Bénin FC play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Université Nationale du Bénin FC | 1,316,699 | 47 | [
{
"id": "3421419",
"title": "Université Nationale du Bénin FC",
"text": " Université Nationale du Bénin FC is a football club of Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese Second division. In 1996 the team has won the Benin Cup.",
"score": "2.083117"
},
{
"id": "3421422",
"title": "Université Nationale du Bénin FC",
"text": " Currently the team plays at the 15000 capacity Stade Charles de Gaulle.",
"score": "1.9197594"
},
{
"id": "3421420",
"title": "Université Nationale du Bénin FC",
"text": "Benin Cup: 2:1996, 2007 ",
"score": "1.8612592"
},
{
"id": "30489601",
"title": "Football in Benin",
"text": " Association football, or soccer, is the most popular sport in Benin. Governed by the Benin Football Federation, the Benin national football team (Les Ecureuils ) joined both FIFA and CAF in 1969 as Dahomey. Dahomey became Benin in 1975.",
"score": "1.6840187"
},
{
"id": "3421421",
"title": "Université Nationale du Bénin FC",
"text": "CAF Confederation Cup: 1 appearance ; 2008 CAF Confederation Cup – Preliminary Round ",
"score": "1.6413445"
},
{
"id": "3725706",
"title": "AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé",
"text": " The Association Sportive Dragons FC de l'Ouémé known as Dragons de l'Ouémé is a football club in Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese first division, the Benin Premier League.",
"score": "1.6402979"
},
{
"id": "2286576",
"title": "Benin",
"text": " Football is generally considered the most popular sport in Benin. In the early 21st century, baseball was introduced to the country.",
"score": "1.6285008"
},
{
"id": "8740671",
"title": "List of football clubs in Benin",
"text": "Adjobi Football Club ; Akanké FC ; AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé ; ASPAC FC ; Avrankou Omnisport FC ",
"score": "1.6138759"
},
{
"id": "8740672",
"title": "List of football clubs in Benin",
"text": "Buffles du Borgou FC ; Dynamite force Benin city ",
"score": "1.611867"
},
{
"id": "8740678",
"title": "List of football clubs in Benin",
"text": "Requins de l'Atlantique FC ",
"score": "1.6110439"
},
{
"id": "6451266",
"title": "Benin Premier League",
"text": "AS Police FC (Porto-Novo) ; ASPAC FC (Cotonou) ; Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; Energie FC (Sèmè-Kpodji) ; Mogas 90 FC (Cotonou) ; Panthères FC (Djougou) ; Tonnerre d'Abomey FC (Bohicon) ",
"score": "1.6104596"
},
{
"id": "26037",
"title": "Postel Sport FC",
"text": " Postel Sport is a football club in Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese Second division. In 1991 the team won the Benin Premier League.",
"score": "1.6096137"
},
{
"id": "11074681",
"title": "Benin national football team",
"text": " Benin's first official game was played at home against Nigeria on November 8, 1959 and resulted in a 1-0 loss. The match was played while the country was still a dependent of France, prior to its independence on 1st August 1960. Benin has been affiliated with FIFA since 1962 and has been a member of the Confederation of African Football since 1969.",
"score": "1.609335"
},
{
"id": "6451267",
"title": "Benin Premier League",
"text": "1969 : FAD Cotonou ; 1970 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1971 : AS Cotonou ; 1972 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1973 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1974 : Etoile Sportive Porto-Novo ; no championship between 1975 and 1977 ; 1978 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1979 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1980 : Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; 1981 : Ajijas Cotonou ; 1982 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1983 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1984 : Lions de l'Atakory (Cotonou) ; 1985 : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1986 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; ",
"score": "1.607578"
},
{
"id": "6451268",
"title": "Benin Premier League",
"text": " : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1988 : no championship ; 1989 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1990 : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1991 : Postel Sport FC (Porto-Novo) ; 1992 : Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; 1993 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1994 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1995 : Toffa Cotonou ; 1996 : Mogas 90 FC (Porto Novo) ; 1997 : Mogas 90 FC (Porto Novo) ; 1998 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1999 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; no official championship between 2000 and 2001 ; 2001/02 : ",
"score": "1.6074588"
},
{
"id": "31939670",
"title": "Rugby union in Benin",
"text": " Rugby union in Benin is a minor but growing sport.",
"score": "1.6035318"
},
{
"id": "6451265",
"title": "Benin Premier League",
"text": "AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; ASOS (Porto-Novo) ; Ayema (Sèmè-Kpodji) ; ESAE (Sakété) ; JA Cotonou (Cotonou) ; Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; USS Kraké (Porto-Novo) ",
"score": "1.5977461"
},
{
"id": "8740674",
"title": "List of football clubs in Benin",
"text": "Espoir FC (Benin football club) ",
"score": "1.5821023"
},
{
"id": "8740676",
"title": "List of football clubs in Benin",
"text": "Mambas Noirs FC ; Mogas 90 FC ",
"score": "1.5797652"
},
{
"id": "11074680",
"title": "Benin national football team",
"text": " The Benin national football team, (French: Équipe nationale de Football du Benin) nicknamed Les Écureuils (The Squirrels), represents Benin in men's international association football and is controlled by the Benin Football Federation. They were known as the Dahomey national football team until 1975, when Republic of Dahomey became Benin. They have never qualified for the World Cup, but have reached four African Nations Cup in recent years, never placing in the top 2 in the group stage – 2004, 2008, 2010 and 2019. In 2019, they reached the knockouts as the third most successful third place team, before making the quarter-finals with a shock win over Morocco, but later lost to Senegal. On 8 February 2010 after the preliminary competition from the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations in Angola, the Benin Football Federation dissolved the national team, coach Henri Dussuyer and his complete staff were fired. On May 9, 2016, Benin was suspended from FIFA, The team represents both FIFA and Confederation of African Football (CAF).",
"score": "1.5770638"
}
] | [
"Université Nationale du Bénin FC\n Université Nationale du Bénin FC is a football club of Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese Second division. In 1996 the team has won the Benin Cup.",
"Université Nationale du Bénin FC\n Currently the team plays at the 15000 capacity Stade Charles de Gaulle.",
"Université Nationale du Bénin FC\nBenin Cup: 2:1996, 2007 ",
"Football in Benin\n Association football, or soccer, is the most popular sport in Benin. Governed by the Benin Football Federation, the Benin national football team (Les Ecureuils ) joined both FIFA and CAF in 1969 as Dahomey. Dahomey became Benin in 1975.",
"Université Nationale du Bénin FC\nCAF Confederation Cup: 1 appearance ; 2008 CAF Confederation Cup – Preliminary Round ",
"AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé\n The Association Sportive Dragons FC de l'Ouémé known as Dragons de l'Ouémé is a football club in Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese first division, the Benin Premier League.",
"Benin\n Football is generally considered the most popular sport in Benin. In the early 21st century, baseball was introduced to the country.",
"List of football clubs in Benin\nAdjobi Football Club ; Akanké FC ; AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé ; ASPAC FC ; Avrankou Omnisport FC ",
"List of football clubs in Benin\nBuffles du Borgou FC ; Dynamite force Benin city ",
"List of football clubs in Benin\nRequins de l'Atlantique FC ",
"Benin Premier League\nAS Police FC (Porto-Novo) ; ASPAC FC (Cotonou) ; Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; Energie FC (Sèmè-Kpodji) ; Mogas 90 FC (Cotonou) ; Panthères FC (Djougou) ; Tonnerre d'Abomey FC (Bohicon) ",
"Postel Sport FC\n Postel Sport is a football club in Benin, playing in the town of Porto-Novo. They play in the Beninese Second division. In 1991 the team won the Benin Premier League.",
"Benin national football team\n Benin's first official game was played at home against Nigeria on November 8, 1959 and resulted in a 1-0 loss. The match was played while the country was still a dependent of France, prior to its independence on 1st August 1960. Benin has been affiliated with FIFA since 1962 and has been a member of the Confederation of African Football since 1969.",
"Benin Premier League\n1969 : FAD Cotonou ; 1970 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1971 : AS Cotonou ; 1972 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1973 : AS Porto-Novo ; 1974 : Etoile Sportive Porto-Novo ; no championship between 1975 and 1977 ; 1978 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1979 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1980 : Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; 1981 : Ajijas Cotonou ; 1982 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1983 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1984 : Lions de l'Atakory (Cotonou) ; 1985 : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1986 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; ",
"Benin Premier League\n : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1988 : no championship ; 1989 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1990 : Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; 1991 : Postel Sport FC (Porto-Novo) ; 1992 : Buffles du Borgou FC (Parakou) ; 1993 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1994 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1995 : Toffa Cotonou ; 1996 : Mogas 90 FC (Porto Novo) ; 1997 : Mogas 90 FC (Porto Novo) ; 1998 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; 1999 : AS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; no official championship between 2000 and 2001 ; 2001/02 : ",
"Rugby union in Benin\n Rugby union in Benin is a minor but growing sport.",
"Benin Premier League\nAS Dragons FC de l'Ouémé (Porto-Novo) ; ASOS (Porto-Novo) ; Ayema (Sèmè-Kpodji) ; ESAE (Sakété) ; JA Cotonou (Cotonou) ; Requins de l'Atlantique FC (Cotonou) ; USS Kraké (Porto-Novo) ",
"List of football clubs in Benin\nEspoir FC (Benin football club) ",
"List of football clubs in Benin\nMambas Noirs FC ; Mogas 90 FC ",
"Benin national football team\n The Benin national football team, (French: Équipe nationale de Football du Benin) nicknamed Les Écureuils (The Squirrels), represents Benin in men's international association football and is controlled by the Benin Football Federation. They were known as the Dahomey national football team until 1975, when Republic of Dahomey became Benin. They have never qualified for the World Cup, but have reached four African Nations Cup in recent years, never placing in the top 2 in the group stage – 2004, 2008, 2010 and 2019. In 2019, they reached the knockouts as the third most successful third place team, before making the quarter-finals with a shock win over Morocco, but later lost to Senegal. On 8 February 2010 after the preliminary competition from the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations in Angola, the Benin Football Federation dissolved the national team, coach Henri Dussuyer and his complete staff were fired. On May 9, 2016, Benin was suspended from FIFA, The team represents both FIFA and Confederation of African Football (CAF)."
] |
What sport does 2012 Uzbekistan First League play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2012 Uzbekistan First League | 3,176,477 | 72 | [
{
"id": "3372527",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " The 2012 Uzbekistan First League was the 21st season of 2nd level football in Uzbekistan since 1992. It is split in an Eastern and Western zone, each featuring 12 teams.",
"score": "1.874849"
},
{
"id": "5155110",
"title": "2014 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": "} ",
"score": "1.8469476"
},
{
"id": "15706588",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan Second League",
"text": " Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan. In second phase of the season 11 teams participated for promotion to higher league level.",
"score": "1.8367635"
},
{
"id": "3372529",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " League consists of two regional groups: zone \"East\" and \"West\". The season comprises two phases. The first phase consists of a regular home-and-away schedule: each team plays the other teams twice. The top eight teams of the first phase from each zone will be merged in one tournament and compete for the championship. The bottom four teams of each zone after first phase will play each other to remain in first league. The draw of the 2012 season was held on 29 February 2012. First League joined Bukhoro-2, Neftchi Khamza, Yuzhanin Navoi, Zaamin from Second League, Lokomotiv BFK and Pakhtakor-2. Imkon-Oltiariq club is replaced by Qo'qon 1912 (former Bunyodkor Qo'qon 1912) and Lokomotiv BFK by FK Atlaschi because of lack of the financial support. FC Yoshlik is replaced in 2nd phase of championship by FK Registon because of club's debts to its players and coaching staff. On August 29, 2012 Yuzhanin Navoi renamed to Zarafshon Navoi.",
"score": "1.8294986"
},
{
"id": "3372531",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " Last updated: 11 July 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"score": "1.8280458"
},
{
"id": "3372530",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " Last updated: 11 July 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"score": "1.8280458"
},
{
"id": "30958280",
"title": "2011 Uzbekistan Second League",
"text": " Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan.",
"score": "1.8156416"
},
{
"id": "3372534",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " Last updated: 31 October 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"score": "1.8147663"
},
{
"id": "3372532",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " League table before start of second phase of championship",
"score": "1.7984918"
},
{
"id": "15706589",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan Second League",
"text": " Season comprise two phases. In first phase teams play against each other in regional competitions to promote to the second phase. In second phase teams are split into 2 regional groups \"East\" and \"West\" and compete for promotion to higher level. Four teams promote to Uzbekistan First League.",
"score": "1.7881259"
},
{
"id": "3372533",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " The last day matches were played on 30 October 2012. Club's end-season standing after finish of second phase of championship. Source: soccerway: Uzbekistan First League",
"score": "1.7666637"
},
{
"id": "3372528",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " Note: In 2012 season Dynamo Ghallakor renamed to Ghallakor-Avtomobilchi, Jaykhun Nukus to FK Orol Nukus, Bunyodkor Qo'qon 1912 to Qo'qon 1912 and FC Erkurgan to FC Yoshlik",
"score": "1.760359"
},
{
"id": "9591035",
"title": "2013 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " League consists of two regional groups: conference \"East\" and \"West\". The season comprises two phases. The first phase consists of a regular home-and-away schedule: each team plays the other teams twice. The top eight teams of the first phase from each zone will be merged in one tournament and compete for the championship. The bottom four teams of each zone after first phase will play each other to remain in first league. The draw of the 2013 season was held on 14 March 2013. First League joined Sherdor-Presstizh, Spartak Bukhoro, Alanga Qarshi, Istiqlol Toshkent, Hotira-79 and Lokomotiv BFK. On 22 March 2013, Uzbek PFL authority announced that FK Khiva and Neftchi Tinchlik are replaced by Bunyodkor-2 and Bukhoro-2 because of lack of the financial support. Bunyodkor-2 to play in East zone and Bukhoro-2 in West zone.",
"score": "1.7559474"
},
{
"id": "9591034",
"title": "2013 Uzbekistan First League",
"text": " The 2013 Uzbekistan First League was the 22nd season of 2nd level football in Uzbekistan since independence in 1992. It is split in an Eastern and Western zone, each featuring 12 teams.",
"score": "1.7535126"
},
{
"id": "30958281",
"title": "2011 Uzbekistan Second League",
"text": " In the second phase participated 14 teams split into three groups: Qarshi, Fergana and Bukhara. The winner of each group promote to First League",
"score": "1.7394495"
},
{
"id": "2388926",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan Cup",
"text": "} ",
"score": "1.7374264"
},
{
"id": "2388925",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan Cup",
"text": "} ",
"score": "1.7374264"
},
{
"id": "2388924",
"title": "2012 Uzbekistan Cup",
"text": "} ",
"score": "1.7374264"
},
{
"id": "31315903",
"title": "2010 Uzbekistan Second League",
"text": " Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan.",
"score": "1.7366946"
},
{
"id": "7607800",
"title": "2012 FIFA Ballon d'Or",
"text": "🇺🇿 Uzbekistan Football Federation ",
"score": "1.7308664"
}
] | [
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n The 2012 Uzbekistan First League was the 21st season of 2nd level football in Uzbekistan since 1992. It is split in an Eastern and Western zone, each featuring 12 teams.",
"2014 Uzbekistan First League\n} ",
"2012 Uzbekistan Second League\n Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan. In second phase of the season 11 teams participated for promotion to higher league level.",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n League consists of two regional groups: zone \"East\" and \"West\". The season comprises two phases. The first phase consists of a regular home-and-away schedule: each team plays the other teams twice. The top eight teams of the first phase from each zone will be merged in one tournament and compete for the championship. The bottom four teams of each zone after first phase will play each other to remain in first league. The draw of the 2012 season was held on 29 February 2012. First League joined Bukhoro-2, Neftchi Khamza, Yuzhanin Navoi, Zaamin from Second League, Lokomotiv BFK and Pakhtakor-2. Imkon-Oltiariq club is replaced by Qo'qon 1912 (former Bunyodkor Qo'qon 1912) and Lokomotiv BFK by FK Atlaschi because of lack of the financial support. FC Yoshlik is replaced in 2nd phase of championship by FK Registon because of club's debts to its players and coaching staff. On August 29, 2012 Yuzhanin Navoi renamed to Zarafshon Navoi.",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n Last updated: 11 July 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n Last updated: 11 July 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"2011 Uzbekistan Second League\n Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan.",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n Last updated: 31 October 2012 Source: Uzbekistan First League",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n League table before start of second phase of championship",
"2012 Uzbekistan Second League\n Season comprise two phases. In first phase teams play against each other in regional competitions to promote to the second phase. In second phase teams are split into 2 regional groups \"East\" and \"West\" and compete for promotion to higher level. Four teams promote to Uzbekistan First League.",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n The last day matches were played on 30 October 2012. Club's end-season standing after finish of second phase of championship. Source: soccerway: Uzbekistan First League",
"2012 Uzbekistan First League\n Note: In 2012 season Dynamo Ghallakor renamed to Ghallakor-Avtomobilchi, Jaykhun Nukus to FK Orol Nukus, Bunyodkor Qo'qon 1912 to Qo'qon 1912 and FC Erkurgan to FC Yoshlik",
"2013 Uzbekistan First League\n League consists of two regional groups: conference \"East\" and \"West\". The season comprises two phases. The first phase consists of a regular home-and-away schedule: each team plays the other teams twice. The top eight teams of the first phase from each zone will be merged in one tournament and compete for the championship. The bottom four teams of each zone after first phase will play each other to remain in first league. The draw of the 2013 season was held on 14 March 2013. First League joined Sherdor-Presstizh, Spartak Bukhoro, Alanga Qarshi, Istiqlol Toshkent, Hotira-79 and Lokomotiv BFK. On 22 March 2013, Uzbek PFL authority announced that FK Khiva and Neftchi Tinchlik are replaced by Bunyodkor-2 and Bukhoro-2 because of lack of the financial support. Bunyodkor-2 to play in East zone and Bukhoro-2 in West zone.",
"2013 Uzbekistan First League\n The 2013 Uzbekistan First League was the 22nd season of 2nd level football in Uzbekistan since independence in 1992. It is split in an Eastern and Western zone, each featuring 12 teams.",
"2011 Uzbekistan Second League\n In the second phase participated 14 teams split into three groups: Qarshi, Fergana and Bukhara. The winner of each group promote to First League",
"2012 Uzbekistan Cup\n} ",
"2012 Uzbekistan Cup\n} ",
"2012 Uzbekistan Cup\n} ",
"2010 Uzbekistan Second League\n Uzbekistan Second League is the third highest football league in Uzbekistan.",
"2012 FIFA Ballon d'Or\n🇺🇿 Uzbekistan Football Federation "
] |
What sport does Nevio de Zordo play? | [
"bobsleigh",
"bobsledding",
"bobsled",
"bobsleighing",
"Bobsled"
] | sport | Nevio de Zordo | 6,490,317 | 45 | [
{
"id": "951958",
"title": "Nevio de Zordo",
"text": " Nevio de Zordo (sometimes listed as Nevio De Zordo, 11 March 1943 – 27 March 2014) was an Italian bobsledder who competed from the mid-1960s until the early 1970s. He won the silver medal in the four-man event at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. De Zordo also won four medals at the FIBT World Championships with two golds (Two-man: 1969, Four-man: 1970) and two silvers (Two-man: 1967, Four-man: 1965).",
"score": "1.7264978"
},
{
"id": "7957299",
"title": "Nevio Pizzolitto",
"text": " Pizzolitto began playing youth soccer with the Sporting-Patriotes of the Quebec Elite Soccer League in 1990. He was picked several times on the LSEQ all-star teams, was also proclaimed Defender of the Year. He helped helping Sporting-Patriotes reach the national club championship in the U15 category in 1990, and later went on to win the national title at the U19 level in 1994.",
"score": "1.4677824"
},
{
"id": "26890912",
"title": "Nevio",
"text": "Nevio Devide (born 1966), Italian former tennis player ; Nevio de Zordo (1943–2014), Italian bobsledder ; Nevio Marasović (born 1983), Croatian film director and screenwriter ; Nevio Orlandi (born 1954), Italian football manager ; Nevio Passaro (born 1980), German–Italian singer, songwriter and producer ; Nevio Pizzolitto (born 1976), Canadian soccer player ; Nevio Scala (born 1947), Italian football sporting director, coach and former player ; Nevio Skull (1903–1945), Italian businessman and politician ; Nevenko Valčić (1933–2007), Yugoslav cyclist nicknamed Nevio Nevio is a masculine given name which is borne by: ",
"score": "1.4626415"
},
{
"id": "12935656",
"title": "Carlos Nevado",
"text": " Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"score": "1.4587414"
},
{
"id": "27073104",
"title": "Andrea Zorzi",
"text": " Andrea Zorzi (born 29 July 1965 in Noale, province of Venice) is a former Italian volleyball player, who won two World Championships with the Italy men's national volleyball team (1990 and 1994). A 201 cm athlete, Zorzi was en effective spiker playing usually as opposite hitter. He was popularly known as Zorro. After his debut in Bormio in 1986, he totalled 325 caps with Italian national team. He was a silver medalist in the 1996 Summer Olympics and also competed at the 1988 and 1992 games. Playing for almost all the major volleyball clubs of Italy, including Maxicono Parma and Sisley Treviso, he won several titles: these include two Italian Championships (1990, 1996) and one European Champions League in 1995. In 1991 he was declared World's Best Player by FIVB. Zorzi 328 apps for national team of italy.",
"score": "1.4432695"
},
{
"id": "12521045",
"title": "Nico Elorde",
"text": " Elorde attended De La Salle Zobel during his high school days and decided to play for the De La Salle Green Archers. However, Elorde decided to transfer La Salle's archrival Ateneo de Manila University because of lack of playing time in his freshman year and the school's recruitment of more point guards, leading to his getting cut from the team. Elorde had to serve a one-year residency rule of the UAAP and finally suited up for the Blue Eagles in the 2012 season.",
"score": "1.4429307"
},
{
"id": "32580457",
"title": "Antonio de Nigris",
"text": " De Nigris' younger brother Aldo is also a footballer (also a striker, he too represented Monterrey and the national team), while older sibling Alfonso is an actor and model. He is also of Italian descent and was given the nickname Tano by his Italian grandfather.",
"score": "1.4235444"
},
{
"id": "32616652",
"title": "Fúlvio de Assis",
"text": " De Assis has played professional basketball in Brazil, Italy, and Spain and has represented Brazil's national basketball team on several occasions. During his time with São José, he became a fan favorite.",
"score": "1.4189608"
},
{
"id": "31113079",
"title": "Nevio Devide",
"text": " Devidè now works in the sport marketing industry. After working in the field of sporting events, and having been in Media Partner (Now Infront Sport), he takes on the role of the Marketing Director for the 2006 Winter Olympics's organising committee. After this experience he assumes the role of CEO of \"Sio spa\", a leading company in the field of technological security. Now he is the marketing, licensing and events director for the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics and Paralympics Games",
"score": "1.4179754"
},
{
"id": "31113078",
"title": "Nevio Devide",
"text": " Devidè, a right-handed player, was born in Saronno and based out of Solaro. Playing on the professional tour in the late 1980s, he won four Challenger titles, all in doubles. He competed in several Grand Prix doubles tournaments, most notably at Bordeaux in 1987, where he and partner Bernhard Pils were semi-finalists. In singles his best performance was a runner-up finish at the 1989 Modena Challenger, with wins over Cristiano Caratti, Bruce Derlin and Menno Oosting.",
"score": "1.4115882"
},
{
"id": "13578388",
"title": "Elvio Banchero",
"text": " Elvio's younger brother Ettore Banchero played football professionally as well. To distinguish them, Elvio was referred to as Banchero I and Ettore as Banchero II.",
"score": "1.4102006"
},
{
"id": "10493678",
"title": "Emiliano Sala",
"text": " Sala began playing football for San Martín de Progreso, where he remained until he was 15 years old. He then moved to San Francisco, Córdoba to play at football school Proyecto Crecer after being spotted by a scout. The club was directly affiliated with Spanish club RCD Mallorca and French side FC Girondins de Bordeaux, scouting local players in the area. After joining the club, he moved into a boarding house with other players from the club's youth system. He played six Preferente matches for Spanish club CD Soledad B between October 2007 and February 2008. In 2009, while living in Granada, Spain, he was recommended to Portuguese District side FC Crato by a fellow Argentinian footballer who played there and joined the Portuguese team. Sala played one official match for Crato, scoring twice, but suddenly decided to leave the club and return to Argentina, saying that his girlfriend was \"in trouble\" in his homeland.",
"score": "1.4092991"
},
{
"id": "30066698",
"title": "Maino Neri",
"text": " Neri debuted for the national team at the 1948 London Olympics wearing the captain's arm band in his first game (all eleven players were making their debut in the game against the U.S.) and played a total of eight caps, among which were games against Switzerland and Belgium at the 1954 World Cup. He was also a member of the Italian squad that took part at the 1952 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4063008"
},
{
"id": "31128280",
"title": "Nemani Nadolo",
"text": " Nadolo played for the NEC Green Rockets in the Japan Top League between 2011 and 2013.",
"score": "1.4000055"
},
{
"id": "5560957",
"title": "Hugo Nervo",
"text": " Nervo was called by coach Sergio Batista for the U-21 Argentine national team that finished third in the 2009 Toulon Tournament. The following year, he was selected for the Argentine U-20 squad to play the 2011 South American Youth Championship.",
"score": "1.395769"
},
{
"id": "7257242",
"title": "Gianmarco Pozzecco",
"text": " basketball after playing the playoffs. On 15 May 2008 at the Palasport Giacomo Del Mauro in Avellino he bid farewell to basketball three minutes from the conclusion of the play-off match between Avellino and Capo d'Orlando, when the game had been already decided, with the elimination of the team of Pozzecco. The match was interrupted to allow the athlete the applause of the audience and the players. Deeply loving basketball and always nurturing the will to play with his brother, in the 2008-09 season, beside collaborating with Gazzetta dello Sport and Sky, Gianmarco Pozzecco wore the jersey of Servolana Trieste, a team playing in the Serie C championship (formerly ",
"score": "1.3916845"
},
{
"id": "158221",
"title": "Dejon Brissett",
"text": " Brissett is a native of Mississauga, Ontario, and primarily played basketball growing up before turning his attention to football. He transferred to Lake Forest Academy in Illinois for his sophomore year, where he played basketball, football, and track. His 46-3 triple jump was the best in 2015 by more than a foot. On the football field, he played wide receiver, defense, and special teams. Brissett ran a 4.59 40-yard dash, has a vertical leap of 35 inches, and was named the Chicago Catholic League Red Division's Offensive Player of the Year.",
"score": "1.3911266"
},
{
"id": "9244710",
"title": "Renato Rocha (bassist)",
"text": " \"Negrete\" after joining the AABB volleyball team; it was initially written as \"Negrelle\", referencing the famous volleyball player José Osvaldo da Fonseca Marcelino (a.k.a. Negrelli), who began his career playing for the club and partook of the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. It later became \"Negrete\" as an inside joke of his friends, saying it was too \"French-sounding\". Rocha later moved to 16 super square, where he befriended Geruza, a former member of punk bands Escola de Escândalos and Blitz 64. Through Geruza he would get acquainted with André Pretorius, Fê Lemos and Renato Russo, of Aborto Elétrico, and Marcelo Bonfá.",
"score": "1.3905187"
},
{
"id": "11415161",
"title": "Alberto Cisolla",
"text": " Alberto Cisolla (born 10 October 1977 in Treviso) is an Italian volleyball player. Cisolla, standing at 1.97 m for 87 kg, plays passing-hitter for Callipo Sport. He won six Italian titles, three European Champions cup, and, with Italian national team, one European Championship (2005, also declared MVP of the tournament). He won a silver medal as part of the Italian team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and also played in the team that came fourth at the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.3869532"
},
{
"id": "25865825",
"title": "Jason Guerriero",
"text": " playing for the Milwaukee Admirals, producing modest numbers. He returned to Europe in 2008 and split time between two teams. With the second, Alba Volán Székesfehérvár, he helped the team win the Hungarian championship. The next season he tied for the scoring lead for the Schwenninger Wild Wings and led the team to a regular season championship. Guerriero played one further season in Denmark before hanging up his skates. In 2011, Guerriero began his coaching career as an assistant for Holy Cross. After two years, he took a similar position with Yale and then joined Brown two years afterwards. He stuck with the Bears and was promoted to Associate head coach in 2019.",
"score": "1.3868546"
}
] | [
"Nevio de Zordo\n Nevio de Zordo (sometimes listed as Nevio De Zordo, 11 March 1943 – 27 March 2014) was an Italian bobsledder who competed from the mid-1960s until the early 1970s. He won the silver medal in the four-man event at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. De Zordo also won four medals at the FIBT World Championships with two golds (Two-man: 1969, Four-man: 1970) and two silvers (Two-man: 1967, Four-man: 1965).",
"Nevio Pizzolitto\n Pizzolitto began playing youth soccer with the Sporting-Patriotes of the Quebec Elite Soccer League in 1990. He was picked several times on the LSEQ all-star teams, was also proclaimed Defender of the Year. He helped helping Sporting-Patriotes reach the national club championship in the U15 category in 1990, and later went on to win the national title at the U19 level in 1994.",
"Nevio\nNevio Devide (born 1966), Italian former tennis player ; Nevio de Zordo (1943–2014), Italian bobsledder ; Nevio Marasović (born 1983), Croatian film director and screenwriter ; Nevio Orlandi (born 1954), Italian football manager ; Nevio Passaro (born 1980), German–Italian singer, songwriter and producer ; Nevio Pizzolitto (born 1976), Canadian soccer player ; Nevio Scala (born 1947), Italian football sporting director, coach and former player ; Nevio Skull (1903–1945), Italian businessman and politician ; Nevenko Valčić (1933–2007), Yugoslav cyclist nicknamed Nevio Nevio is a masculine given name which is borne by: ",
"Carlos Nevado\n Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"Andrea Zorzi\n Andrea Zorzi (born 29 July 1965 in Noale, province of Venice) is a former Italian volleyball player, who won two World Championships with the Italy men's national volleyball team (1990 and 1994). A 201 cm athlete, Zorzi was en effective spiker playing usually as opposite hitter. He was popularly known as Zorro. After his debut in Bormio in 1986, he totalled 325 caps with Italian national team. He was a silver medalist in the 1996 Summer Olympics and also competed at the 1988 and 1992 games. Playing for almost all the major volleyball clubs of Italy, including Maxicono Parma and Sisley Treviso, he won several titles: these include two Italian Championships (1990, 1996) and one European Champions League in 1995. In 1991 he was declared World's Best Player by FIVB. Zorzi 328 apps for national team of italy.",
"Nico Elorde\n Elorde attended De La Salle Zobel during his high school days and decided to play for the De La Salle Green Archers. However, Elorde decided to transfer La Salle's archrival Ateneo de Manila University because of lack of playing time in his freshman year and the school's recruitment of more point guards, leading to his getting cut from the team. Elorde had to serve a one-year residency rule of the UAAP and finally suited up for the Blue Eagles in the 2012 season.",
"Antonio de Nigris\n De Nigris' younger brother Aldo is also a footballer (also a striker, he too represented Monterrey and the national team), while older sibling Alfonso is an actor and model. He is also of Italian descent and was given the nickname Tano by his Italian grandfather.",
"Fúlvio de Assis\n De Assis has played professional basketball in Brazil, Italy, and Spain and has represented Brazil's national basketball team on several occasions. During his time with São José, he became a fan favorite.",
"Nevio Devide\n Devidè now works in the sport marketing industry. After working in the field of sporting events, and having been in Media Partner (Now Infront Sport), he takes on the role of the Marketing Director for the 2006 Winter Olympics's organising committee. After this experience he assumes the role of CEO of \"Sio spa\", a leading company in the field of technological security. Now he is the marketing, licensing and events director for the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics and Paralympics Games",
"Nevio Devide\n Devidè, a right-handed player, was born in Saronno and based out of Solaro. Playing on the professional tour in the late 1980s, he won four Challenger titles, all in doubles. He competed in several Grand Prix doubles tournaments, most notably at Bordeaux in 1987, where he and partner Bernhard Pils were semi-finalists. In singles his best performance was a runner-up finish at the 1989 Modena Challenger, with wins over Cristiano Caratti, Bruce Derlin and Menno Oosting.",
"Elvio Banchero\n Elvio's younger brother Ettore Banchero played football professionally as well. To distinguish them, Elvio was referred to as Banchero I and Ettore as Banchero II.",
"Emiliano Sala\n Sala began playing football for San Martín de Progreso, where he remained until he was 15 years old. He then moved to San Francisco, Córdoba to play at football school Proyecto Crecer after being spotted by a scout. The club was directly affiliated with Spanish club RCD Mallorca and French side FC Girondins de Bordeaux, scouting local players in the area. After joining the club, he moved into a boarding house with other players from the club's youth system. He played six Preferente matches for Spanish club CD Soledad B between October 2007 and February 2008. In 2009, while living in Granada, Spain, he was recommended to Portuguese District side FC Crato by a fellow Argentinian footballer who played there and joined the Portuguese team. Sala played one official match for Crato, scoring twice, but suddenly decided to leave the club and return to Argentina, saying that his girlfriend was \"in trouble\" in his homeland.",
"Maino Neri\n Neri debuted for the national team at the 1948 London Olympics wearing the captain's arm band in his first game (all eleven players were making their debut in the game against the U.S.) and played a total of eight caps, among which were games against Switzerland and Belgium at the 1954 World Cup. He was also a member of the Italian squad that took part at the 1952 Summer Olympics.",
"Nemani Nadolo\n Nadolo played for the NEC Green Rockets in the Japan Top League between 2011 and 2013.",
"Hugo Nervo\n Nervo was called by coach Sergio Batista for the U-21 Argentine national team that finished third in the 2009 Toulon Tournament. The following year, he was selected for the Argentine U-20 squad to play the 2011 South American Youth Championship.",
"Gianmarco Pozzecco\n basketball after playing the playoffs. On 15 May 2008 at the Palasport Giacomo Del Mauro in Avellino he bid farewell to basketball three minutes from the conclusion of the play-off match between Avellino and Capo d'Orlando, when the game had been already decided, with the elimination of the team of Pozzecco. The match was interrupted to allow the athlete the applause of the audience and the players. Deeply loving basketball and always nurturing the will to play with his brother, in the 2008-09 season, beside collaborating with Gazzetta dello Sport and Sky, Gianmarco Pozzecco wore the jersey of Servolana Trieste, a team playing in the Serie C championship (formerly ",
"Dejon Brissett\n Brissett is a native of Mississauga, Ontario, and primarily played basketball growing up before turning his attention to football. He transferred to Lake Forest Academy in Illinois for his sophomore year, where he played basketball, football, and track. His 46-3 triple jump was the best in 2015 by more than a foot. On the football field, he played wide receiver, defense, and special teams. Brissett ran a 4.59 40-yard dash, has a vertical leap of 35 inches, and was named the Chicago Catholic League Red Division's Offensive Player of the Year.",
"Renato Rocha (bassist)\n \"Negrete\" after joining the AABB volleyball team; it was initially written as \"Negrelle\", referencing the famous volleyball player José Osvaldo da Fonseca Marcelino (a.k.a. Negrelli), who began his career playing for the club and partook of the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. It later became \"Negrete\" as an inside joke of his friends, saying it was too \"French-sounding\". Rocha later moved to 16 super square, where he befriended Geruza, a former member of punk bands Escola de Escândalos and Blitz 64. Through Geruza he would get acquainted with André Pretorius, Fê Lemos and Renato Russo, of Aborto Elétrico, and Marcelo Bonfá.",
"Alberto Cisolla\n Alberto Cisolla (born 10 October 1977 in Treviso) is an Italian volleyball player. Cisolla, standing at 1.97 m for 87 kg, plays passing-hitter for Callipo Sport. He won six Italian titles, three European Champions cup, and, with Italian national team, one European Championship (2005, also declared MVP of the tournament). He won a silver medal as part of the Italian team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and also played in the team that came fourth at the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"Jason Guerriero\n playing for the Milwaukee Admirals, producing modest numbers. He returned to Europe in 2008 and split time between two teams. With the second, Alba Volán Székesfehérvár, he helped the team win the Hungarian championship. The next season he tied for the scoring lead for the Schwenninger Wild Wings and led the team to a regular season championship. Guerriero played one further season in Denmark before hanging up his skates. In 2011, Guerriero began his coaching career as an assistant for Holy Cross. After two years, he took a similar position with Yale and then joined Brown two years afterwards. He stuck with the Bears and was promoted to Associate head coach in 2019."
] |
What sport does Wojciech Jarmuż play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Wojciech Jarmuż | 2,947,312 | 24 | [
{
"id": "9676344",
"title": "Wojciech Jarmuż",
"text": " Wojciech Jarmuż (born January 5, 1984 in Słupsk) is a Polish footballer (defender) who last played for Polish Ekstraklasa side GKS Bełchatów.",
"score": "1.9241276"
},
{
"id": "32310915",
"title": "Jakub Jarosz",
"text": " Jakub Władysław Jarosz (born 10 February 1987) is a Polish volleyball player, former member of the Poland men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (London 2012), 2009 European Champion, gold medallist of the 2012 World League, silver medallist of the 2011 World Cup. On club level, he plays for Polish team GKS Katowice, Polish Champion (2009).",
"score": "1.7476175"
},
{
"id": "6421502",
"title": "Świerklaniec",
"text": "Dawid Jarka, soccer player ",
"score": "1.638874"
},
{
"id": "11657714",
"title": "Maciej Jarosz",
"text": " Maciej Krzysztof Jarosz (born 4 March 1959) is a Polish former volleyball player and coach, former member of the Poland men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (Moscow 1980), silver medallist of the European Championship (1977, 1979, 1981), three–time Polish Champion, currently working as a volleyball commentator.",
"score": "1.6106141"
},
{
"id": "9736211",
"title": "Gerard Wodarz",
"text": " Gerard Wodarz (10 August 1913 – 8 November 1982) was one of the best football players of interwar Poland. He was a multiple champion of the country (representing Ruch Wielkie Hajduki, which in January 1939 became Ruch Chorzów) and also played 28 games on the Polish national football team, scoring 9 goals.",
"score": "1.6074336"
},
{
"id": "4736617",
"title": "Janusz Wojnarowicz",
"text": " Janusz Wojnarowicz (born 14 April 1980 in Tychy) is former Polish judoka and an american football player for the Gliwice Lions, a team in the PLFA I. He's also related to Polish football player Jakub Błaszczykowski.",
"score": "1.5995474"
},
{
"id": "1220116",
"title": "Thomas Jarmoc",
"text": " He started playing volleyball in the team of the University of Alberta. As a professional player debuted in Greek club AEK Athens. In 2011 moved to VfB Friedrichshafen. He won with club from Friedrichshafen German Cup 2012. Season 2012/2013 spent in VC Euphony Asse-Lennik and moved to Polish club Jastrzębski Węgiel in 2013. With this club Jarmoc won bronze medal of Polish Championship 2012/2013 and bronze medal of CEV Champions League 2014 after winning match against VC Zenit-Kazan. In 2014 left club from Jastrzębie-Zdrój.",
"score": "1.5964482"
},
{
"id": "11657715",
"title": "Maciej Jarosz",
"text": " He is the son of Zbigniew Jarosz, volleyball player and member of Gwardia Wrocław, and Maria Ronczewska–Jarosz, multiple Polish swimming champion. His sons, Jakub (born 1987) and Marcin (born 1980), are also volleyball players.",
"score": "1.5937481"
},
{
"id": "9736212",
"title": "Gerard Wodarz",
"text": " He was born in 1913 in Bismarckhütte (a settlement in Upper Silesia, which in January 1939 became part of the city of Chorzów), and died in 1982 in his hometown. Wodarz was a left-wing forward player. His career started in Ruch Wielkie Hajduki, in which he played in the years 1926-1939 and after the war, in 1946-47. Together with Ernest Wilimowski and Teodor Peterek, was part of one of the best forward formations in the history of Ruch. In 183 games he scored 51 goals, and for five times was the Champion of Poland (1933–1936 and 1938). On the national team of Poland he took part in 31 games. His debut occurred on 2 October 1932 in Bucharest, against Romania. Wodarz participated in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, where he scored 5 goals. ",
"score": "1.5848031"
},
{
"id": "32310917",
"title": "Jakub Jarosz",
"text": " In 2009, the Polish national volleyball team, including Jarosz, won a title of the European Champions. On 14 September 2009, he was awarded the Knight's Cross of Polonia Restituta. The Order was conferred on the following day by the Prime Minister of Poland, Donald Tusk. With the national team, he won three medals in 2011 – silver at the 2011 World Cup, bronze at the 2011 World League and 2011 European Championship. In 2012, he won a gold medal of the 2012 World League.",
"score": "1.5775506"
},
{
"id": "30065967",
"title": "Jarmo Jokila",
"text": " Jarmo Jokila (born February 13, 1986 in Lemu) is a Finnish ice hockey player who currently plays for Podhale Nowy Targ in the Polska Hokej Liga, the top-level ice hockey league in Poland. His brother Janne is also a professional ice hockey player, drafted by NHL team Columbus Blue Jackets in 2000 and currently playing for Milton Keynes Lightning in the UK.",
"score": "1.5573778"
},
{
"id": "3241004",
"title": "Tadeusz Jarmuziewicz",
"text": " Tadeusz Jarmuziewicz (born 21 September 1957 in Piława Górna) is a Polish politician. He was elected to the Sejm on 25 September 2005, getting 9635 votes in 21 Opole district as a candidate from the Civic Platform list. He was also a member of Sejm 1997-2001 and Sejm 2001-2005.",
"score": "1.5566406"
},
{
"id": "1391098",
"title": "Jerzy Czubała",
"text": " During the winters Czubała played ice hockey, admitting that he preferred ice hockey to football. He played for Włókniarz Gdańsk, Gedania Gdańsk, Kolejarz Tczew and Stoczniowiec Gdańsk in a career which spanned 8 years.",
"score": "1.5540276"
},
{
"id": "26035207",
"title": "Tadeusz Kuchar",
"text": " Tadeusz Kuchar (13 April 1891, in Kraków – 5 April 1966, in Warsaw) was a Polish athlete, footballer, swimmer, ice-skater, skier, sports official, and the brother of Wacław Kuchar. For most of his life he was strongly connected with the team of Pogoń Lwów, where he played midfield. He was co-founder of the Polish Olympic Committee. Occasionally, in the years 1923, 1925 and 1928 he held the post of coach of the Polish National Team. Also, he was the first director of the Polish Track and Field Association and in 1945-1946 was the director of the Polish Football Association. He fought in the World War One in Austro-Hungarian artillery. He fought in the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Polish-Soviet War as an artillery officer. He retired from the military in the rank of major. He kept his rank in spite of Poland becoming communist.",
"score": "1.5524428"
},
{
"id": "3329169",
"title": "Wojciech Ferens",
"text": " On 2 April 2015 was appointed to the Polish national team by head coach Stephane Antiga. After the training camp in Spała he went to team B of Polish national team led by Andrzej Kowal. He took part in 1st edition of 2015 European Games. On 14 August 2015 he achieved first medal as senior national team player – bronze of European League. His national team won 3rd place match with Estonia (3–0).",
"score": "1.5456516"
},
{
"id": "1220118",
"title": "Thomas Jarmoc",
"text": "2011/2012 Simple gold cup.svg German Cup, with VfB Friedrichshafen ; 2013/2014 Bronze medal with cup.svg Polish Championship, with Jastrzębski Węgiel ",
"score": "1.5393059"
},
{
"id": "29175722",
"title": "Łukasz Kruczek",
"text": " large hill, and the Polish team - Maciej Kot, Kamil Stoch, Piotr Żyła and Dawid Kubacki won bronze medal. Since then his jumpers occupy high positions in the World Cup and Summer Grand Prix. During his work as a trainer has 5 different Polish jumpers (Adam Małysz, Kamil Stoch, Jan Ziobro, Krzysztof Biegun and Piotr Żyła) was winning the World Cup competitions. In the season 2013/2014 Stoch is the leader of the World Cup. In 2014 Kamil Stoch was a double gold medalist at the Olympic Games 2014 in Sochi, Polish team was 4th. Kruczek led the Polish team for the best results at the Olympic Games in history.",
"score": "1.5369163"
},
{
"id": "1311720",
"title": "Radosław Pindiur",
"text": " He was born in Mrągowo, at the age of 9 moved with his family to Toronto, Canada. At age 16 went back to Poland, this time Kraków to play for Wisła Kraków SSA. Earned bachelor's degree from physical education at Wszechnica Świętokrzyska in Kielce and currently studies International Business at the Cracow University of Economics.",
"score": "1.5314181"
},
{
"id": "5057286",
"title": "Jarosław Olech",
"text": " Jarosław is a three-times World Games gold medalist in the Men's Middleweight Powerlifting event. He has won the world title at the International Powerlifting Federation seventeen consecutive times in his lifting class.",
"score": "1.524492"
},
{
"id": "32310916",
"title": "Jakub Jarosz",
"text": " Jakub Jarosz was born in Nysa, Poland. His grandfather and father Maciej (a three–time silver medalist at the European Championship) are former volleyball players. His brother Marcin was also a volleyball player. On 12 May 2012, he married Agnieszka (née Trzcińska). On 26 August 2013, their first child was born, a son named Kacper. In early 2017, his wife gave birth to their second son Leon.",
"score": "1.5242063"
}
] | [
"Wojciech Jarmuż\n Wojciech Jarmuż (born January 5, 1984 in Słupsk) is a Polish footballer (defender) who last played for Polish Ekstraklasa side GKS Bełchatów.",
"Jakub Jarosz\n Jakub Władysław Jarosz (born 10 February 1987) is a Polish volleyball player, former member of the Poland men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (London 2012), 2009 European Champion, gold medallist of the 2012 World League, silver medallist of the 2011 World Cup. On club level, he plays for Polish team GKS Katowice, Polish Champion (2009).",
"Świerklaniec\nDawid Jarka, soccer player ",
"Maciej Jarosz\n Maciej Krzysztof Jarosz (born 4 March 1959) is a Polish former volleyball player and coach, former member of the Poland men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (Moscow 1980), silver medallist of the European Championship (1977, 1979, 1981), three–time Polish Champion, currently working as a volleyball commentator.",
"Gerard Wodarz\n Gerard Wodarz (10 August 1913 – 8 November 1982) was one of the best football players of interwar Poland. He was a multiple champion of the country (representing Ruch Wielkie Hajduki, which in January 1939 became Ruch Chorzów) and also played 28 games on the Polish national football team, scoring 9 goals.",
"Janusz Wojnarowicz\n Janusz Wojnarowicz (born 14 April 1980 in Tychy) is former Polish judoka and an american football player for the Gliwice Lions, a team in the PLFA I. He's also related to Polish football player Jakub Błaszczykowski.",
"Thomas Jarmoc\n He started playing volleyball in the team of the University of Alberta. As a professional player debuted in Greek club AEK Athens. In 2011 moved to VfB Friedrichshafen. He won with club from Friedrichshafen German Cup 2012. Season 2012/2013 spent in VC Euphony Asse-Lennik and moved to Polish club Jastrzębski Węgiel in 2013. With this club Jarmoc won bronze medal of Polish Championship 2012/2013 and bronze medal of CEV Champions League 2014 after winning match against VC Zenit-Kazan. In 2014 left club from Jastrzębie-Zdrój.",
"Maciej Jarosz\n He is the son of Zbigniew Jarosz, volleyball player and member of Gwardia Wrocław, and Maria Ronczewska–Jarosz, multiple Polish swimming champion. His sons, Jakub (born 1987) and Marcin (born 1980), are also volleyball players.",
"Gerard Wodarz\n He was born in 1913 in Bismarckhütte (a settlement in Upper Silesia, which in January 1939 became part of the city of Chorzów), and died in 1982 in his hometown. Wodarz was a left-wing forward player. His career started in Ruch Wielkie Hajduki, in which he played in the years 1926-1939 and after the war, in 1946-47. Together with Ernest Wilimowski and Teodor Peterek, was part of one of the best forward formations in the history of Ruch. In 183 games he scored 51 goals, and for five times was the Champion of Poland (1933–1936 and 1938). On the national team of Poland he took part in 31 games. His debut occurred on 2 October 1932 in Bucharest, against Romania. Wodarz participated in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, where he scored 5 goals. ",
"Jakub Jarosz\n In 2009, the Polish national volleyball team, including Jarosz, won a title of the European Champions. On 14 September 2009, he was awarded the Knight's Cross of Polonia Restituta. The Order was conferred on the following day by the Prime Minister of Poland, Donald Tusk. With the national team, he won three medals in 2011 – silver at the 2011 World Cup, bronze at the 2011 World League and 2011 European Championship. In 2012, he won a gold medal of the 2012 World League.",
"Jarmo Jokila\n Jarmo Jokila (born February 13, 1986 in Lemu) is a Finnish ice hockey player who currently plays for Podhale Nowy Targ in the Polska Hokej Liga, the top-level ice hockey league in Poland. His brother Janne is also a professional ice hockey player, drafted by NHL team Columbus Blue Jackets in 2000 and currently playing for Milton Keynes Lightning in the UK.",
"Tadeusz Jarmuziewicz\n Tadeusz Jarmuziewicz (born 21 September 1957 in Piława Górna) is a Polish politician. He was elected to the Sejm on 25 September 2005, getting 9635 votes in 21 Opole district as a candidate from the Civic Platform list. He was also a member of Sejm 1997-2001 and Sejm 2001-2005.",
"Jerzy Czubała\n During the winters Czubała played ice hockey, admitting that he preferred ice hockey to football. He played for Włókniarz Gdańsk, Gedania Gdańsk, Kolejarz Tczew and Stoczniowiec Gdańsk in a career which spanned 8 years.",
"Tadeusz Kuchar\n Tadeusz Kuchar (13 April 1891, in Kraków – 5 April 1966, in Warsaw) was a Polish athlete, footballer, swimmer, ice-skater, skier, sports official, and the brother of Wacław Kuchar. For most of his life he was strongly connected with the team of Pogoń Lwów, where he played midfield. He was co-founder of the Polish Olympic Committee. Occasionally, in the years 1923, 1925 and 1928 he held the post of coach of the Polish National Team. Also, he was the first director of the Polish Track and Field Association and in 1945-1946 was the director of the Polish Football Association. He fought in the World War One in Austro-Hungarian artillery. He fought in the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Polish-Soviet War as an artillery officer. He retired from the military in the rank of major. He kept his rank in spite of Poland becoming communist.",
"Wojciech Ferens\n On 2 April 2015 was appointed to the Polish national team by head coach Stephane Antiga. After the training camp in Spała he went to team B of Polish national team led by Andrzej Kowal. He took part in 1st edition of 2015 European Games. On 14 August 2015 he achieved first medal as senior national team player – bronze of European League. His national team won 3rd place match with Estonia (3–0).",
"Thomas Jarmoc\n2011/2012 Simple gold cup.svg German Cup, with VfB Friedrichshafen ; 2013/2014 Bronze medal with cup.svg Polish Championship, with Jastrzębski Węgiel ",
"Łukasz Kruczek\n large hill, and the Polish team - Maciej Kot, Kamil Stoch, Piotr Żyła and Dawid Kubacki won bronze medal. Since then his jumpers occupy high positions in the World Cup and Summer Grand Prix. During his work as a trainer has 5 different Polish jumpers (Adam Małysz, Kamil Stoch, Jan Ziobro, Krzysztof Biegun and Piotr Żyła) was winning the World Cup competitions. In the season 2013/2014 Stoch is the leader of the World Cup. In 2014 Kamil Stoch was a double gold medalist at the Olympic Games 2014 in Sochi, Polish team was 4th. Kruczek led the Polish team for the best results at the Olympic Games in history.",
"Radosław Pindiur\n He was born in Mrągowo, at the age of 9 moved with his family to Toronto, Canada. At age 16 went back to Poland, this time Kraków to play for Wisła Kraków SSA. Earned bachelor's degree from physical education at Wszechnica Świętokrzyska in Kielce and currently studies International Business at the Cracow University of Economics.",
"Jarosław Olech\n Jarosław is a three-times World Games gold medalist in the Men's Middleweight Powerlifting event. He has won the world title at the International Powerlifting Federation seventeen consecutive times in his lifting class.",
"Jakub Jarosz\n Jakub Jarosz was born in Nysa, Poland. His grandfather and father Maciej (a three–time silver medalist at the European Championship) are former volleyball players. His brother Marcin was also a volleyball player. On 12 May 2012, he married Agnieszka (née Trzcińska). On 26 August 2013, their first child was born, a son named Kacper. In early 2017, his wife gave birth to their second son Leon."
] |
What sport does Ricardo Gónzalez Reinoso play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ricardo González (footballer, born 1965) | 2,915,204 | 42 | [
{
"id": "24993086",
"title": "Ricardo González (footballer, born 1965)",
"text": " Ricardo Nicolás Gónzalez Reinoso (born 31 August 1965), known as Richard González and nicknamed as Manteca (Lard), is a retired Chilean footballer who played as a defender during his career. He obtained one cap for the Chilean national side, making his only appearance on 8 September 1993 in a friendly match against Spain.",
"score": "1.6807201"
},
{
"id": "9368973",
"title": "Ricardo Primitivo González",
"text": " During his club basketball playing career, González played with the Argentine teams Santos Lugares and Club Atlético Palermo, one of the oldest clubs in Palermo.",
"score": "1.6307306"
},
{
"id": "16406439",
"title": "Enrique González (field hockey)",
"text": " González was a part of the Spain squad which won the bronze medal at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. He played in two Junior World Cups. He was named the best player of the 2016 Junior World Cup.",
"score": "1.6253245"
},
{
"id": "30341366",
"title": "Jair Reinoso",
"text": " Jair Alexander Reinoso Moreno (born 7 June 1985 in Cali, Colombia) is a Colombian football striker currently playing for Liga de Fútbol Profesional Boliviano club The Strongest.",
"score": "1.6251388"
},
{
"id": "8657696",
"title": "Dashenko Ricardo",
"text": " As a member of the Netherlands national baseball team he played in the 2009 Baseball World Cup, 2013 World Baseball Classic , , 2014 European Baseball Championship , 2015 World Port Tournament , 2015 WBSC Premier12 , 2016 Haarlem Baseball Week , , and the 2016 European Baseball Championship. He played for Team Netherlands in the 2019 European Baseball Championship, and at the Africa/Europe 2020 Olympic Qualification tournament in Italy in September 2019.",
"score": "1.5921818"
},
{
"id": "4705080",
"title": "Margarito González",
"text": " González made his professional debut with Reboceros de la Piedad in 2001. Although he has not been playing because of joaquin Beltran's experience he was once called for the national soccer team in Mexico. According to FIFA, he is the Mexican soccer player with the hardest kick in soccer history. In 2012 Gonzalez took time off due to depression, after making a free kick hitting Cruz Azul's defender Marco Bueno, and leaving him in the hospital for five months. Margarito went back to play with Querètaro FC.",
"score": "1.5871805"
},
{
"id": "9841921",
"title": "Ricardo González (golfer)",
"text": "World Cup (representing Argentina): 1996, 1998, 2005, 2007 ",
"score": "1.5808446"
},
{
"id": "10582509",
"title": "Paul Gonzalez",
"text": " Gonzalez attended Texas Christian University. In 1989, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox of the Cape Cod Baseball League and was named a league all-star. Gonzalez was picked up in the amateur draft by the San Diego Padres and played for a variety of minor league teams including the High Desert Mavericks, Wichita Wranglers, Las Vegas Stars, Prince William Cannons, Abilene Prairie Dogs and the Birmingham Barons. Gonzalez played in the Australian Baseball League and the International Baseball League of Australia for the Brisbane Bandits from until and Melbourne Monarchs in the 1998–1999 season. In total he made 227 appearances, boasting 48 home-runs and 168 RBI's, giving him a batting average of .304 and slugging .567. In Gonzalez led the Claxton Shield and Queensland Rams batting with an average of .476 and slugging .857. By, he played for Orix BlueWave in Japan. In, he was part of the Australian Olympic baseball team, who achieved a Silver Medal in the baseball tournament at the Athens Olympics.",
"score": "1.5785836"
},
{
"id": "6035589",
"title": "Carlos Reinoso",
"text": " Carlos Reinoso began his playing career playing for boyhood club Audax Italiano, joining them at age 15. He played in over 150 games with Audax before he was sold to Club América of Mexico. His debut with América came in 1970 in a league match against Atlante. Reinoso played in over 200 matches with the Mexican club, winning the league in the 1970–71 and 1975–76 seasons, as well as the Copa México in 1973–74, a Campeón de Campeones cup in 1975–76, a CONCACAF Cup in 1977, and a Copa Interamericana in 1978. To date, he is the foreigner with the most games played for Club América, playing in 364 games across all competitions, and with 95 goals he is the club's seventh-highest scorer of all-time. In 1979, Reinoso played a season with Deportivo Neza, before retiring and embarking on a coaching career. A Chilean international, Reinoso played in 34 matches and scored 7 goals with the national team from 1966 till 1977, and played at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 1975 Copa America.",
"score": "1.5774662"
},
{
"id": "16406438",
"title": "Enrique González (field hockey)",
"text": " Enrique Mateo González de Castejón Velilla (born 26 April 1996) is a Spanish field hockey player who plays as a forward for Club de Campo and the Spanish national team.",
"score": "1.5750167"
},
{
"id": "12935656",
"title": "Carlos Nevado",
"text": " Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"score": "1.5666019"
},
{
"id": "16406440",
"title": "Enrique González (field hockey)",
"text": " González made his debut for the senior national team in November 2014 in a test match against Great Britain. He represented Spain at the 2018 World Cup. At the 2019 EuroHockey Championship, he won his first medal with the senior team as they finished second. On 25 May 2021, he was selected in the squad for the 2021 EuroHockey Championship.",
"score": "1.5616026"
},
{
"id": "4905047",
"title": "José Manuel González (athlete)",
"text": " González is a T36 classified competitor. In March 2012, he medalled at the Spanish national disability championships.",
"score": "1.561313"
},
{
"id": "9368974",
"title": "Ricardo Primitivo González",
"text": " With the senior Argentine national basketball team, González played at the 1947 FIBA South American Championship, the 1949 FIBA South American Championship, and the 1955 FIBA South American Championship. He also competed with Argentina at the 1948 Summer Olympics and the 1952 Summer Olympics. He was the team captain of the senior Argentine national team that won the gold medal at the 1950 FIBA World Championship. He was named to the 1950 FIBA World Championship's All-Tournament Team. He also won silver medals at the 1951 Pan American Games, and the 1955 Pan American Games.",
"score": "1.5511202"
},
{
"id": "936815",
"title": "Pablo Reinoso",
"text": " Born in Llay Llay, Reinoso traveled to Santiago for began his career ar Colo-Colo football academy at very young age. After years in the academy, he fail to be promoted to the first adult team. In January 2005, aged 19, Reinoso joined as professional player to the Chilean Primera División club Deportes Puerto Montt as back-up of the first-choice goalkeeper Carlos Espinoza. His opportunities in the team were very limited, due to the good performances of his teammate Espinoza in the goal. Remaining until May 2006 in the city of Puerto Montt, after his bad spell in that club, Reinoso joined Tercera División amateur club Rayo del Pacífico. After spells in San Luis Quillota in the 2007 and Trasandino in the next season, he moved to Naval in January 2009.",
"score": "1.5369955"
},
{
"id": "15142489",
"title": "Miguel Alfredo González",
"text": " González pitched for La Habana in the Cuban National Series from 2007 through 2009. He played for the Cuba national baseball team in the 2009 World Port Tournament and 2009 and 2011 Baseball World Cups. He was playing for the Artemisa team when he was caught trying to defect in January 2012 and he was suspended from playing in the league at that point. He succeeded in defecting from Cuba to El Salvador in 2013, and then moved to Mexico.",
"score": "1.5369036"
},
{
"id": "15176880",
"title": "André Raposo",
"text": " André Raposo (born February 10, 1978) is a water polo player from Brazil. Nicknamed Quito he competed in two consecutive Pan American Games for his native country, starting in 2003. Cordeiro won two silver medals at this event with the Brazil men's national water polo team.",
"score": "1.5360183"
},
{
"id": "8385681",
"title": "Antonio González (field hockey)",
"text": " Antonio González Izquierdo (born 13 October 1969) is a former field hockey goalkeeper from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"score": "1.534599"
},
{
"id": "32705218",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1982)",
"text": " In 2004, González was called up to take part of the 2004 CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament disputed in Chile. He played for the senior team in a 2–1 win against South Korea in 15 January 2005.",
"score": "1.5333161"
},
{
"id": "8647058",
"title": "Ricardo Saprissa",
"text": " He played several sports, excelling at football as well as in baseball, tennis, field hockey and polo. He joined the football club RCD Espanyol, and won the national cup competition (Copa del Rey) with the club in 1929 (along with the Catalan football championship in the same season), having also won Spain's field hockey national championship in 1924 and the national tennis doubles championship in 1923 and 1924. He participated with Spain in men's and mixed doubles tennis at the Paris Olympic Games in 1924 and was on the Spanish team in the equivalent of the Davis Cup in 1930. He moved to San José, Costa Rica, in 1932.",
"score": "1.5302571"
}
] | [
"Ricardo González (footballer, born 1965)\n Ricardo Nicolás Gónzalez Reinoso (born 31 August 1965), known as Richard González and nicknamed as Manteca (Lard), is a retired Chilean footballer who played as a defender during his career. He obtained one cap for the Chilean national side, making his only appearance on 8 September 1993 in a friendly match against Spain.",
"Ricardo Primitivo González\n During his club basketball playing career, González played with the Argentine teams Santos Lugares and Club Atlético Palermo, one of the oldest clubs in Palermo.",
"Enrique González (field hockey)\n González was a part of the Spain squad which won the bronze medal at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. He played in two Junior World Cups. He was named the best player of the 2016 Junior World Cup.",
"Jair Reinoso\n Jair Alexander Reinoso Moreno (born 7 June 1985 in Cali, Colombia) is a Colombian football striker currently playing for Liga de Fútbol Profesional Boliviano club The Strongest.",
"Dashenko Ricardo\n As a member of the Netherlands national baseball team he played in the 2009 Baseball World Cup, 2013 World Baseball Classic , , 2014 European Baseball Championship , 2015 World Port Tournament , 2015 WBSC Premier12 , 2016 Haarlem Baseball Week , , and the 2016 European Baseball Championship. He played for Team Netherlands in the 2019 European Baseball Championship, and at the Africa/Europe 2020 Olympic Qualification tournament in Italy in September 2019.",
"Margarito González\n González made his professional debut with Reboceros de la Piedad in 2001. Although he has not been playing because of joaquin Beltran's experience he was once called for the national soccer team in Mexico. According to FIFA, he is the Mexican soccer player with the hardest kick in soccer history. In 2012 Gonzalez took time off due to depression, after making a free kick hitting Cruz Azul's defender Marco Bueno, and leaving him in the hospital for five months. Margarito went back to play with Querètaro FC.",
"Ricardo González (golfer)\nWorld Cup (representing Argentina): 1996, 1998, 2005, 2007 ",
"Paul Gonzalez\n Gonzalez attended Texas Christian University. In 1989, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox of the Cape Cod Baseball League and was named a league all-star. Gonzalez was picked up in the amateur draft by the San Diego Padres and played for a variety of minor league teams including the High Desert Mavericks, Wichita Wranglers, Las Vegas Stars, Prince William Cannons, Abilene Prairie Dogs and the Birmingham Barons. Gonzalez played in the Australian Baseball League and the International Baseball League of Australia for the Brisbane Bandits from until and Melbourne Monarchs in the 1998–1999 season. In total he made 227 appearances, boasting 48 home-runs and 168 RBI's, giving him a batting average of .304 and slugging .567. In Gonzalez led the Claxton Shield and Queensland Rams batting with an average of .476 and slugging .857. By, he played for Orix BlueWave in Japan. In, he was part of the Australian Olympic baseball team, who achieved a Silver Medal in the baseball tournament at the Athens Olympics.",
"Carlos Reinoso\n Carlos Reinoso began his playing career playing for boyhood club Audax Italiano, joining them at age 15. He played in over 150 games with Audax before he was sold to Club América of Mexico. His debut with América came in 1970 in a league match against Atlante. Reinoso played in over 200 matches with the Mexican club, winning the league in the 1970–71 and 1975–76 seasons, as well as the Copa México in 1973–74, a Campeón de Campeones cup in 1975–76, a CONCACAF Cup in 1977, and a Copa Interamericana in 1978. To date, he is the foreigner with the most games played for Club América, playing in 364 games across all competitions, and with 95 goals he is the club's seventh-highest scorer of all-time. In 1979, Reinoso played a season with Deportivo Neza, before retiring and embarking on a coaching career. A Chilean international, Reinoso played in 34 matches and scored 7 goals with the national team from 1966 till 1977, and played at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 1975 Copa America.",
"Enrique González (field hockey)\n Enrique Mateo González de Castejón Velilla (born 26 April 1996) is a Spanish field hockey player who plays as a forward for Club de Campo and the Spanish national team.",
"Carlos Nevado\n Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"Enrique González (field hockey)\n González made his debut for the senior national team in November 2014 in a test match against Great Britain. He represented Spain at the 2018 World Cup. At the 2019 EuroHockey Championship, he won his first medal with the senior team as they finished second. On 25 May 2021, he was selected in the squad for the 2021 EuroHockey Championship.",
"José Manuel González (athlete)\n González is a T36 classified competitor. In March 2012, he medalled at the Spanish national disability championships.",
"Ricardo Primitivo González\n With the senior Argentine national basketball team, González played at the 1947 FIBA South American Championship, the 1949 FIBA South American Championship, and the 1955 FIBA South American Championship. He also competed with Argentina at the 1948 Summer Olympics and the 1952 Summer Olympics. He was the team captain of the senior Argentine national team that won the gold medal at the 1950 FIBA World Championship. He was named to the 1950 FIBA World Championship's All-Tournament Team. He also won silver medals at the 1951 Pan American Games, and the 1955 Pan American Games.",
"Pablo Reinoso\n Born in Llay Llay, Reinoso traveled to Santiago for began his career ar Colo-Colo football academy at very young age. After years in the academy, he fail to be promoted to the first adult team. In January 2005, aged 19, Reinoso joined as professional player to the Chilean Primera División club Deportes Puerto Montt as back-up of the first-choice goalkeeper Carlos Espinoza. His opportunities in the team were very limited, due to the good performances of his teammate Espinoza in the goal. Remaining until May 2006 in the city of Puerto Montt, after his bad spell in that club, Reinoso joined Tercera División amateur club Rayo del Pacífico. After spells in San Luis Quillota in the 2007 and Trasandino in the next season, he moved to Naval in January 2009.",
"Miguel Alfredo González\n González pitched for La Habana in the Cuban National Series from 2007 through 2009. He played for the Cuba national baseball team in the 2009 World Port Tournament and 2009 and 2011 Baseball World Cups. He was playing for the Artemisa team when he was caught trying to defect in January 2012 and he was suspended from playing in the league at that point. He succeeded in defecting from Cuba to El Salvador in 2013, and then moved to Mexico.",
"André Raposo\n André Raposo (born February 10, 1978) is a water polo player from Brazil. Nicknamed Quito he competed in two consecutive Pan American Games for his native country, starting in 2003. Cordeiro won two silver medals at this event with the Brazil men's national water polo team.",
"Antonio González (field hockey)\n Antonio González Izquierdo (born 13 October 1969) is a former field hockey goalkeeper from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"David González (footballer, born 1982)\n In 2004, González was called up to take part of the 2004 CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament disputed in Chile. He played for the senior team in a 2–1 win against South Korea in 15 January 2005.",
"Ricardo Saprissa\n He played several sports, excelling at football as well as in baseball, tennis, field hockey and polo. He joined the football club RCD Espanyol, and won the national cup competition (Copa del Rey) with the club in 1929 (along with the Catalan football championship in the same season), having also won Spain's field hockey national championship in 1924 and the national tennis doubles championship in 1923 and 1924. He participated with Spain in men's and mixed doubles tennis at the Paris Olympic Games in 1924 and was on the Spanish team in the equivalent of the Davis Cup in 1930. He moved to San José, Costa Rica, in 1932."
] |
What sport does Miroslav Milutinović play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Miroslav Milutinović | 5,188,636 | 28 | [
{
"id": "31845617",
"title": "Miroslav Milutinović",
"text": " Miroslav Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Mиpocлaв Mилутинoвић; born February 1, 1985 in Zvornik, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football defender who last played for Kolubara Lazarevac.",
"score": "1.8720381"
},
{
"id": "24933266",
"title": "Nikola Milutinov",
"text": " Milutinov represented the senior men's Serbian national basketball team for the first time, at the EuroBasket 2015, under the team's head coach Aleksandar Đorđević. In the first phase of the tournament, Serbia dominated in the toughest group of the tournament, Group B, with a 5–0 record, and they then eliminated Finland and the Czech Republic, in the round of 16 and quarterfinal games, respectively. However, they were beaten in the semifinal game by Lithuania, by a score of 67–64, and they would go on to eventually lose to the tournament's host team, France, in the bronze-medal game, by a score of 81–68. Milutinov appeared in 6 games during the tournament, playing in only 3.5 minutes per game, the lowest on the team. At the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, the national team of Serbia was dubbed as favorite to win the trophy, but was eventually upset in the quarterfinals by Argentina. With wins over the United States and Czech Republic, it finished in fifth place. Milutinov averaged 7 points and 2.3 rebounds over 8 games.",
"score": "1.6985766"
},
{
"id": "31845619",
"title": "Miroslav Milutinović",
"text": "Profile and stats at Srbijafudbal. ",
"score": "1.6884782"
},
{
"id": "24933265",
"title": "Nikola Milutinov",
"text": " Milutinov played for the Serbian under-19 national team, at the 2013 FIBA Under-19 World Cup, in Prague, on a roster alongside Vasilije Micić, Mihajlo Andrić, Jovan Novak, Nikola Jokić, and Nikola Janković. He won the silver medal at the tournament, after losing 68–82 to the U.S. under-19 team, which featured Aaron Gordon, Justise Winslow, Elfrid Payton, Marcus Smart, and Jahlil Okafor. Milutinov averaged 10.7 points and 5.9 rebounds per game at the tournament.",
"score": "1.6766298"
},
{
"id": "666720",
"title": "Miloš Milutinović",
"text": " During his club career, Milutinović played for FK Bor, FK Partizan, OFK Beograd, FC Bayern Munich, RCF Paris, and Stade Français Paris. In the 1955–56 season, he scored two goals in the first ever European Champion Clubs' Cup match, a 3–3 draw between FK Partizan and Sporting Clube de Portugal, then scored four goals in the return leg which Partizan won 5–2 in Belgrade. In the quarter-finals second leg, he scored two goals in a 3–0 win over eventual champions Real Madrid, but that was not enough to overcome Real Madrid's 4–0 win in the first leg. In total, he played 213 matches and scored 231 goals for FK Partizan, winning two national cups (1954 and 1957). He then moved to OFK Beograd and later to Bayern Munich. In 1959, he underwent surgery for his ongoing lung problems. He stayed one year in Germany before playing in France.",
"score": "1.6733074"
},
{
"id": "31845618",
"title": "Miroslav Milutinović",
"text": " He had previously played with lower league clubs FK Cement Beočin and ČSK Pivara and also with FK Vojvodina in the Serbian SuperLiga.",
"score": "1.6499166"
},
{
"id": "111564",
"title": "Milutinović",
"text": "Andreja Milutinović (born 1990), Serbian basketball player. ; Bora Milutinović (born 1944), Serbian football coach. ; Ivan Milutinović (1901–1944), Serbian Partisan. ; Ivica Milutinović (born 1983), Serbian footballer. ; Lazar Milutinović (born 1998), Serbian footballer. ; Maja Milutinović (born 1987), Montenegrin basketballer. ; Milan Milutinović (born 1942), former President of Serbia. ; Milan Milutinović (footballer) (born 1983), Serbian footballer. ; Milorad Milutinović (1935–2015), Yugoslav Serbian footballer. ; Miloš Milutinović (1933–2003), Yugoslav Serbian footballer and coach. ; Miroslav Milutinović (born 1985), Serbian footballer. ; Sima Milutinović Sarajlija (1791–1847), Serbian intellectual and diplomat. ; Sima Milutinović (1899–1981), Yugoslav mechanical engineer and a professor. ; Zdravko Milutinović (born 1951), retired Yugoslav sports shooter. ; Zoran Milutinović (born 1988), Bosnian footballer. Milutinović (Милутиновић) is a Serbo-Croatian surname, a patronymic derived from Milutin. It may refer to: ",
"score": "1.6427081"
},
{
"id": "13784626",
"title": "Rade Milutinović",
"text": " Milutinović had two stints for Crvena zvezda of the Yugoslav League. In the 1993–94 season, he won the Yugoslav League with Zvezda and played together with Dragoljub Vidačić, Ivica Mavrenski, Saša Obradović, Mileta Lisica, Aleksandar Trifunović, and Dejan Tomašević. In the 2000–01 season, Milutinović played for German team Mitteldeutscher. During that season his team played FIBA Korać Cup where he averaged 14.8 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game over four tournaments games. He also played in Israel and Slovenia.",
"score": "1.6346251"
},
{
"id": "29256720",
"title": "Milutin Sredojević",
"text": " Sredojević formerly played for Svoboda Ljubljana, Sinđelić Belgrade, Grafičar Belgrade, FK Zorka Subotica and FK Pionir Subotica. He operated as a defensive midfielder but was cut short by a recurring knee injury but he opted to cross to coaching to stay in the game of football.",
"score": "1.6120316"
},
{
"id": "13784625",
"title": "Rade Milutinović",
"text": " Milutinović played college basketball for the San Diego-based U.S. International University.",
"score": "1.6003699"
},
{
"id": "666721",
"title": "Miloš Milutinović",
"text": " For the Yugoslavia national football team, Milutinović was named the player of the tournament as Yugoslavia won the European youth title in 1951, finishing top scorer with four goals. He made his full international debut on 21 May 1953 against Wales, in a 5–2 victory. Milutinović earned 33 caps in total and represented the country in the 1954 and 1958 World Cups.",
"score": "1.5915034"
},
{
"id": "27243676",
"title": "Andreja Milutinović",
"text": " Andreja Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Андреја Милутиновић, born August 6, 1990) is a Serbian professional basketball player for Kecskeméti TE of the Nemzeti Bajnokság I/A.",
"score": "1.590841"
},
{
"id": "31845696",
"title": "Milan Milutinović (footballer)",
"text": " Milan Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Mилутинoвић, born April 20, 1983) is a former Serbian footballer.",
"score": "1.5886192"
},
{
"id": "666719",
"title": "Miloš Milutinović",
"text": " Miloš Milutinović (5 February 1933 – 28 January 2003) was a Serbian professional footballer and manager from Yugoslavia. Milutinović is regarded as one of the most talented players in his country's history and one of the most talented wingers/forwards of all time, being nicknamed Plava čigra (The Blond Buzzer) for his skills.",
"score": "1.5878536"
},
{
"id": "8269202",
"title": "Maja Milutinović",
"text": " Maja Milutinović (Маја Милутиновић; born 2 October 1987) is a former Montenegrin basketball player.",
"score": "1.5856961"
},
{
"id": "3074832",
"title": "Milutin Ivković",
"text": " He started playing football in the youth team of SK Jugoslavija, and became a regular senior player for the club between 1922 and 1929 playing a total of 235 matches. Towards the end of his career he moved to another Belgrade club, BASK.",
"score": "1.5846611"
},
{
"id": "2601953",
"title": "Jovan Milutinović",
"text": " After spells at Mauerwerk Sport and 1210 Wien, Milutinović joined Floridsdorfer in 2016. In 2017, Milutinović began playing with the reserve team of Floridsdorfer. He got his professional debut for the club in the 2. Liga against Young Violets on 9 November 2018. He ended the 2018-19 season with four appearances 2. Liga. Beside that, he made 25 games and scored 20 goals for the reserve team, helping them reaching a fifth place in the Austrian 2. Landesliga. On 27 June 2019, Milutinović signed his first professional contract with Floridsdorfer. In January 2020, he was loaned out to Wiener Stadtliga club SR Donaufeld for the rest of the 2019-20 season to gain some experience, as he at the time, only was playing for Floridsdorfer's reserve team. He played a total of three appearances for Donaufeld.",
"score": "1.5753902"
},
{
"id": "24933261",
"title": "Nikola Milutinov",
"text": " 10 rebounds. For that performance, he was selected to the Adriatic League 2014–15 season's ideal five of Round 8 of the competition. On 14 April, in Game 1 of the Adriatic League semifinal series against Crvena zvezda, he hurt the cornea in his right eye, after a collision with Jaka Blažič. He returned to action in the following game, although without the recommendation of the team's medical staff. Eventually, Crvena zvezda won the Adriatic League's finals series over Milutinov's team, Partizan, with a 3–1 series score. Over 28 games played in the Adriatic League that season, Milutinov averaged 9.8 points and 7.6 rebounds per game.",
"score": "1.5667198"
},
{
"id": "31271201",
"title": "Bora Milutinović",
"text": " Milutinović comes from a footballing family; he and his two brothers Miloš and Milorad played together for Partizan. His father was killed in World War II, his mother by tuberculosis soon after the war. He said he does not remember either of his parents. He was raised by an aunt, and raised playing football. Milutinović is married to a Mexican and currently resides in Qatar. He is fluent in English, Spanish, Italian and French as well as his native Serbian.",
"score": "1.5604815"
},
{
"id": "24933258",
"title": "Nikola Milutinov",
"text": " Nikola Milutinov (born 30 December 1994) is a Serbian professional basketball player for CSKA Moscow of the VTB United League and the EuroLeague. He also represents the Serbia national basketball team internationally. Standing at 2.13m, he plays the center position.",
"score": "1.5598369"
}
] | [
"Miroslav Milutinović\n Miroslav Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Mиpocлaв Mилутинoвић; born February 1, 1985 in Zvornik, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football defender who last played for Kolubara Lazarevac.",
"Nikola Milutinov\n Milutinov represented the senior men's Serbian national basketball team for the first time, at the EuroBasket 2015, under the team's head coach Aleksandar Đorđević. In the first phase of the tournament, Serbia dominated in the toughest group of the tournament, Group B, with a 5–0 record, and they then eliminated Finland and the Czech Republic, in the round of 16 and quarterfinal games, respectively. However, they were beaten in the semifinal game by Lithuania, by a score of 67–64, and they would go on to eventually lose to the tournament's host team, France, in the bronze-medal game, by a score of 81–68. Milutinov appeared in 6 games during the tournament, playing in only 3.5 minutes per game, the lowest on the team. At the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, the national team of Serbia was dubbed as favorite to win the trophy, but was eventually upset in the quarterfinals by Argentina. With wins over the United States and Czech Republic, it finished in fifth place. Milutinov averaged 7 points and 2.3 rebounds over 8 games.",
"Miroslav Milutinović\nProfile and stats at Srbijafudbal. ",
"Nikola Milutinov\n Milutinov played for the Serbian under-19 national team, at the 2013 FIBA Under-19 World Cup, in Prague, on a roster alongside Vasilije Micić, Mihajlo Andrić, Jovan Novak, Nikola Jokić, and Nikola Janković. He won the silver medal at the tournament, after losing 68–82 to the U.S. under-19 team, which featured Aaron Gordon, Justise Winslow, Elfrid Payton, Marcus Smart, and Jahlil Okafor. Milutinov averaged 10.7 points and 5.9 rebounds per game at the tournament.",
"Miloš Milutinović\n During his club career, Milutinović played for FK Bor, FK Partizan, OFK Beograd, FC Bayern Munich, RCF Paris, and Stade Français Paris. In the 1955–56 season, he scored two goals in the first ever European Champion Clubs' Cup match, a 3–3 draw between FK Partizan and Sporting Clube de Portugal, then scored four goals in the return leg which Partizan won 5–2 in Belgrade. In the quarter-finals second leg, he scored two goals in a 3–0 win over eventual champions Real Madrid, but that was not enough to overcome Real Madrid's 4–0 win in the first leg. In total, he played 213 matches and scored 231 goals for FK Partizan, winning two national cups (1954 and 1957). He then moved to OFK Beograd and later to Bayern Munich. In 1959, he underwent surgery for his ongoing lung problems. He stayed one year in Germany before playing in France.",
"Miroslav Milutinović\n He had previously played with lower league clubs FK Cement Beočin and ČSK Pivara and also with FK Vojvodina in the Serbian SuperLiga.",
"Milutinović\nAndreja Milutinović (born 1990), Serbian basketball player. ; Bora Milutinović (born 1944), Serbian football coach. ; Ivan Milutinović (1901–1944), Serbian Partisan. ; Ivica Milutinović (born 1983), Serbian footballer. ; Lazar Milutinović (born 1998), Serbian footballer. ; Maja Milutinović (born 1987), Montenegrin basketballer. ; Milan Milutinović (born 1942), former President of Serbia. ; Milan Milutinović (footballer) (born 1983), Serbian footballer. ; Milorad Milutinović (1935–2015), Yugoslav Serbian footballer. ; Miloš Milutinović (1933–2003), Yugoslav Serbian footballer and coach. ; Miroslav Milutinović (born 1985), Serbian footballer. ; Sima Milutinović Sarajlija (1791–1847), Serbian intellectual and diplomat. ; Sima Milutinović (1899–1981), Yugoslav mechanical engineer and a professor. ; Zdravko Milutinović (born 1951), retired Yugoslav sports shooter. ; Zoran Milutinović (born 1988), Bosnian footballer. Milutinović (Милутиновић) is a Serbo-Croatian surname, a patronymic derived from Milutin. It may refer to: ",
"Rade Milutinović\n Milutinović had two stints for Crvena zvezda of the Yugoslav League. In the 1993–94 season, he won the Yugoslav League with Zvezda and played together with Dragoljub Vidačić, Ivica Mavrenski, Saša Obradović, Mileta Lisica, Aleksandar Trifunović, and Dejan Tomašević. In the 2000–01 season, Milutinović played for German team Mitteldeutscher. During that season his team played FIBA Korać Cup where he averaged 14.8 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game over four tournaments games. He also played in Israel and Slovenia.",
"Milutin Sredojević\n Sredojević formerly played for Svoboda Ljubljana, Sinđelić Belgrade, Grafičar Belgrade, FK Zorka Subotica and FK Pionir Subotica. He operated as a defensive midfielder but was cut short by a recurring knee injury but he opted to cross to coaching to stay in the game of football.",
"Rade Milutinović\n Milutinović played college basketball for the San Diego-based U.S. International University.",
"Miloš Milutinović\n For the Yugoslavia national football team, Milutinović was named the player of the tournament as Yugoslavia won the European youth title in 1951, finishing top scorer with four goals. He made his full international debut on 21 May 1953 against Wales, in a 5–2 victory. Milutinović earned 33 caps in total and represented the country in the 1954 and 1958 World Cups.",
"Andreja Milutinović\n Andreja Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Андреја Милутиновић, born August 6, 1990) is a Serbian professional basketball player for Kecskeméti TE of the Nemzeti Bajnokság I/A.",
"Milan Milutinović (footballer)\n Milan Milutinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Mилутинoвић, born April 20, 1983) is a former Serbian footballer.",
"Miloš Milutinović\n Miloš Milutinović (5 February 1933 – 28 January 2003) was a Serbian professional footballer and manager from Yugoslavia. Milutinović is regarded as one of the most talented players in his country's history and one of the most talented wingers/forwards of all time, being nicknamed Plava čigra (The Blond Buzzer) for his skills.",
"Maja Milutinović\n Maja Milutinović (Маја Милутиновић; born 2 October 1987) is a former Montenegrin basketball player.",
"Milutin Ivković\n He started playing football in the youth team of SK Jugoslavija, and became a regular senior player for the club between 1922 and 1929 playing a total of 235 matches. Towards the end of his career he moved to another Belgrade club, BASK.",
"Jovan Milutinović\n After spells at Mauerwerk Sport and 1210 Wien, Milutinović joined Floridsdorfer in 2016. In 2017, Milutinović began playing with the reserve team of Floridsdorfer. He got his professional debut for the club in the 2. Liga against Young Violets on 9 November 2018. He ended the 2018-19 season with four appearances 2. Liga. Beside that, he made 25 games and scored 20 goals for the reserve team, helping them reaching a fifth place in the Austrian 2. Landesliga. On 27 June 2019, Milutinović signed his first professional contract with Floridsdorfer. In January 2020, he was loaned out to Wiener Stadtliga club SR Donaufeld for the rest of the 2019-20 season to gain some experience, as he at the time, only was playing for Floridsdorfer's reserve team. He played a total of three appearances for Donaufeld.",
"Nikola Milutinov\n 10 rebounds. For that performance, he was selected to the Adriatic League 2014–15 season's ideal five of Round 8 of the competition. On 14 April, in Game 1 of the Adriatic League semifinal series against Crvena zvezda, he hurt the cornea in his right eye, after a collision with Jaka Blažič. He returned to action in the following game, although without the recommendation of the team's medical staff. Eventually, Crvena zvezda won the Adriatic League's finals series over Milutinov's team, Partizan, with a 3–1 series score. Over 28 games played in the Adriatic League that season, Milutinov averaged 9.8 points and 7.6 rebounds per game.",
"Bora Milutinović\n Milutinović comes from a footballing family; he and his two brothers Miloš and Milorad played together for Partizan. His father was killed in World War II, his mother by tuberculosis soon after the war. He said he does not remember either of his parents. He was raised by an aunt, and raised playing football. Milutinović is married to a Mexican and currently resides in Qatar. He is fluent in English, Spanish, Italian and French as well as his native Serbian.",
"Nikola Milutinov\n Nikola Milutinov (born 30 December 1994) is a Serbian professional basketball player for CSKA Moscow of the VTB United League and the EuroLeague. He also represents the Serbia national basketball team internationally. Standing at 2.13m, he plays the center position."
] |
What sport does Best play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Best (footballer, born 1968) | 3,487,891 | 80 | [
{
"id": "10411818",
"title": "Best Player",
"text": " Best Player is a 2011 television film that aired on Nickelodeon on March 12, 2011. The movie stars Jerry Trainor and Jennette McCurdy, from the show iCarly. Filming started on October 24, 2009 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada and wrapped up production on November 18, 2009.",
"score": "1.4386363"
},
{
"id": "10652864",
"title": "George Best",
"text": " in exuberant goal celebrations. Best played for three clubs in the United States: Los Angeles Aztecs, Fort Lauderdale Strikers and later San Jose Earthquakes; he also played for the Detroit Express on a European tour. Best was a success on the field, scoring 15 goals in 24 games in his first season with the Aztecs and named as the NASL's best midfielder in his second. He and manager Ken Adam opened \"Bestie's Beach Club\" (now called \"The Underground\" after the London subway system) in Hermosa Beach, California in the 1970s, and continued to operate it until the 1990s. Best caused a stir when ",
"score": "1.4141667"
},
{
"id": "5488870",
"title": "Ultimate in Japan",
"text": " Ultimate, originally called ultimate frisbee, is a non-contact team field sport played with a flying disc, invented in New Jersey, USA, in 1968. Japanese players and teams rose to prominence in the 1990s, and today are among the strongest competitors in the sport globally.",
"score": "1.4096036"
},
{
"id": "10986639",
"title": "Football",
"text": " the highest revenue out of any single professional sports league. Thus, the best association football and American football players are among the highest paid athletes in the world. Australian rules football has the highest spectator attendance of all sports in Australia. Similarly, Gaelic football is the most popular sport in Ireland in terms of match attendance, and the All-Ireland Football Final is the most watched event of that nation's sporting year. Rugby union is the most popular sport in New Zealand, Samoa, Tonga, and Fiji. It is also the fastest growing sport in the U.S. with college rugby being the fastest growing college sport in that country.",
"score": "1.4074819"
},
{
"id": "2785619",
"title": "List of rural sports and games",
"text": "Aunt Sally – An Oxfordshire game, it is the under arm throwing of the dolly (a truncheon shaped stick) at a suspended target. Each player in the team has 6 throws. The best score out of 24 wins. ; Bat and trap – An English bat-and-ball game, played in pub gardens mostly in Kent. ; Bog snorkelling – Competitors must complete two consecutive lengths of a water filled trench cut through a peat bog, in the shortest time possible. ; Coconut shy – Each player has 6 balls to throw at targets of coconuts balanced on raised stands. The player with the highest number of hits wins. ; Cooper's ",
"score": "1.389595"
},
{
"id": "29923335",
"title": "Cricket AM",
"text": " throw a ball at the stumps with their \"wrong\" hand, closely resembled Soccer AM's Crossbar Challenge. In 2009, two weekly features called 'Ultimate Sportsman' and 'Brain + Brawn' were introduced. In 'Ultimate Sportsman', three county professionals all from the same team compete to become the ultimate sportsman. A penalty shootout, a golf pitching challenge and a 3 dart throw are completed, and the player with the most points after this is the winner. In 'Brain + Brawn', two players from the same team attempt to score as many points as possible. One player has to answer quiz questions, while the other must hold a 5 kg dumbbell with their arm straight and horizontal to the body. Time ends when the weight cannot be held for any longer.",
"score": "1.3799264"
},
{
"id": "32866582",
"title": "Variations of golf",
"text": " Four-ball (also known as better-ball, and sometimes best-ball) is a pairs format. Each player plays their own ball, with the better of the two scores on each hole counting as the pair's score. Four-ball can be played as match play or stroke play.",
"score": "1.3785287"
},
{
"id": "25291968",
"title": "Play Sports",
"text": "NFL ",
"score": "1.3739676"
},
{
"id": "2501124",
"title": "Amateur sports",
"text": " Disc League (AUDL) and Major League Ultimate (MLU). The game of guts was invented by the Healy Brothers in the 1950s and developed at the International Frisbee Tournament (IFT) in Marquette, Michigan. The game of ultimate, the most widely played disc game, began in the late 1960s with Joel Silver and Jared Kass. In the 1970s it developed as an organized sport with the creation of the Ultimate Players Association with Dan Roddick, Tom Kennedy and Irv Kalb. Double disc court was invented and introduced in the early 1970s by Jim Palmeri. In 1974, freestyle competition was created and introduced by Ken Westerfield and Discrafts Jim Kenner. In 1976, the game of disc golf was standardized with targets called \"pole holes\" invented and developed by Wham-O's Ed Headrick.",
"score": "1.3734248"
},
{
"id": "1620554",
"title": "Racketlon",
"text": " Racketlon is a combination sport in which competitors play a sequence of the four most popular racket sports: table tennis, badminton, squash, and tennis. It originated in Finland and Sweden and was modeled on other combination sports like the triathlon and decathlon.",
"score": "1.3718843"
},
{
"id": "33012484",
"title": "Major women's sport leagues in the United States and Canada",
"text": " Each of the leagues represents the highest competition in their respective sports. These major women's sports leagues are considered as the main platoon, not only in the quality of the talents, but also at the play level. The best players of these leagues are icons in their respective sports. Soccer stars include Marta, Abby Wambach, Christine Sinclair, Sam Kerr, and Alex Morgan. Women's ice hockey features Caroline Ouellette, Kim St-Pierre, and Angela Ruggiero, while basketball includes Sue Bird, Elena Delle Donne, Candace Parker, and Breanna Stewart.",
"score": "1.3711104"
},
{
"id": "15788132",
"title": "Sports in Kerala",
"text": " Volleyball, another popular sport, is often played on makeshift courts on sandy beaches along the coast. Jimmy George, born in Peravoor, Kannur, was arguably the most successful volleyball player ever to represent India. At his prime he was regarded as among the world's ten best players.",
"score": "1.3658884"
},
{
"id": "10270452",
"title": "Net sport",
"text": "racquet sports such as tennis, badminton, pickleball and table tennis (but not squash or racquetball, where players must hit the ball towards a wall). ; volleyball, footvolley, headis, roundnet or sepak takraw, where players must hit the ball with body. A net sport is a sport where a net is a standard part of the game, especially where the net separates the opponents. The object of these games is to hit the ball or bird over the net back to the opponent. Play typically begins with one side serving the ball/bird by initially tossing or releasing it and then hitting it over the net. This then starts a ",
"score": "1.3646147"
},
{
"id": "15135926",
"title": "Flying disc sports",
"text": " while the other side will spin into your hand, making for a more secure catch. Many players avoid this problem by catching with both hands when possible. The most popular throws used in a game of ultimate are backhand, sidearm/forehand, hammer and scoober. Being a deep threat, with multiple throwing techniques and the ability to pass the disc before the defense has had a chance to reset, is always optimal. Some players use a throw and catch freestyle practice to help improve their ultimate handling skills. The game was invented in 1968 as an evening pastime by Jared Kass. Ultimate is distinguished by its Spirit of the Game - the principles of fair play, sportsmanship, ",
"score": "1.36216"
},
{
"id": "13219944",
"title": "Sport in the United Kingdom",
"text": " high-profile events featuring a combined team representing one or more nations. Overall, association football attracts the most viewers and money though the nation is notable for the diversity of its sporting interests, especially at the elite level. Major individual sports include athletics, cycling, motorsport, and horse racing. Tennis is the highest profile sport for the two weeks of the Wimbledon Championships, but otherwise struggles to hold its own in the country of its birth. Snooker and darts, too, enjoy period profile boosts in line with the holding of their largest events. Many other sports are also played and followed to a lesser degree. There is much debate over which sport has the most active participants with swimming, athletics, and cycling all found to have wider active participation than association football in the 2010 Sport England Active People survey.",
"score": "1.3620663"
},
{
"id": "30612667",
"title": "Best, Netherlands",
"text": "Eric Swinkels (born 1949 in Best) sports shooter and silver medallist at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Peter Aerts (born 1970) a Dutch semi-retired super heavyweight kickboxer, trained in Best ; Jesse Mahieu (born 1978 in Best) field hockey defender and team silver medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics ; Dennis Retera (born 1986 in Best) a Dutch racing driver ; Roel van de Sande (born 1987 in Best) a Dutch professional footballer with 250 club caps ",
"score": "1.3524826"
},
{
"id": "2286013",
"title": "Cue sports",
"text": " • Outdoor games played on a lawn, field or court, played with varying equipment that may include hoops, pins, holes or other targets or obstacles, and clubs, curved-head sticks, or mallets. Most such games are obsolete, aside from croquet. Golf and field hockey, as well as stick-less games such as bocce, boules and bowls, are historically related. • Croquet (popular lawn game and former Olympic sport) • Jeu de mail (obsolete) • Pall-mall (obsolete) • Trucco (obsolete)",
"score": "1.3521359"
},
{
"id": "94022",
"title": "Society of the United States",
"text": " Since the late nineteenth century, baseball is regarded as the national sport; American football, basketball, and ice hockey are the country's three other leading professional team sports. College football and basketball also attract large audiences. Football is now by several measures the most popular spectator sport in the United States. Soccer, though not a leading professional sport in the country, is played widely at the youth and amateur levels. Boxing and horse racing were once the most watched individual sports, but they have been eclipsed by golf and auto racing, particularly NASCAR. Tennis and many outdoor sports are also popular.",
"score": "1.3518817"
},
{
"id": "28338892",
"title": "Marhi Panuan",
"text": " Punjabi Kabaddi, cricket and volleyball are the three most popular sports.",
"score": "1.3496385"
},
{
"id": "8055096",
"title": "Football tennis",
"text": " Footballtennis, also known as futnet (in Czech and Slovak nohejbal), is a sport played with a football. It is a ball game that can be played indoors or outdoors in a court divided by a low net with two opposing teams (one, two or three players) who try to score a point hitting the ball with any part of their body except for the hands and making it bounce in the opponent's area in a way that makes it difficult or impossible for the other team to return it over the net.",
"score": "1.3493154"
}
] | [
"Best Player\n Best Player is a 2011 television film that aired on Nickelodeon on March 12, 2011. The movie stars Jerry Trainor and Jennette McCurdy, from the show iCarly. Filming started on October 24, 2009 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada and wrapped up production on November 18, 2009.",
"George Best\n in exuberant goal celebrations. Best played for three clubs in the United States: Los Angeles Aztecs, Fort Lauderdale Strikers and later San Jose Earthquakes; he also played for the Detroit Express on a European tour. Best was a success on the field, scoring 15 goals in 24 games in his first season with the Aztecs and named as the NASL's best midfielder in his second. He and manager Ken Adam opened \"Bestie's Beach Club\" (now called \"The Underground\" after the London subway system) in Hermosa Beach, California in the 1970s, and continued to operate it until the 1990s. Best caused a stir when ",
"Ultimate in Japan\n Ultimate, originally called ultimate frisbee, is a non-contact team field sport played with a flying disc, invented in New Jersey, USA, in 1968. Japanese players and teams rose to prominence in the 1990s, and today are among the strongest competitors in the sport globally.",
"Football\n the highest revenue out of any single professional sports league. Thus, the best association football and American football players are among the highest paid athletes in the world. Australian rules football has the highest spectator attendance of all sports in Australia. Similarly, Gaelic football is the most popular sport in Ireland in terms of match attendance, and the All-Ireland Football Final is the most watched event of that nation's sporting year. Rugby union is the most popular sport in New Zealand, Samoa, Tonga, and Fiji. It is also the fastest growing sport in the U.S. with college rugby being the fastest growing college sport in that country.",
"List of rural sports and games\nAunt Sally – An Oxfordshire game, it is the under arm throwing of the dolly (a truncheon shaped stick) at a suspended target. Each player in the team has 6 throws. The best score out of 24 wins. ; Bat and trap – An English bat-and-ball game, played in pub gardens mostly in Kent. ; Bog snorkelling – Competitors must complete two consecutive lengths of a water filled trench cut through a peat bog, in the shortest time possible. ; Coconut shy – Each player has 6 balls to throw at targets of coconuts balanced on raised stands. The player with the highest number of hits wins. ; Cooper's ",
"Cricket AM\n throw a ball at the stumps with their \"wrong\" hand, closely resembled Soccer AM's Crossbar Challenge. In 2009, two weekly features called 'Ultimate Sportsman' and 'Brain + Brawn' were introduced. In 'Ultimate Sportsman', three county professionals all from the same team compete to become the ultimate sportsman. A penalty shootout, a golf pitching challenge and a 3 dart throw are completed, and the player with the most points after this is the winner. In 'Brain + Brawn', two players from the same team attempt to score as many points as possible. One player has to answer quiz questions, while the other must hold a 5 kg dumbbell with their arm straight and horizontal to the body. Time ends when the weight cannot be held for any longer.",
"Variations of golf\n Four-ball (also known as better-ball, and sometimes best-ball) is a pairs format. Each player plays their own ball, with the better of the two scores on each hole counting as the pair's score. Four-ball can be played as match play or stroke play.",
"Play Sports\nNFL ",
"Amateur sports\n Disc League (AUDL) and Major League Ultimate (MLU). The game of guts was invented by the Healy Brothers in the 1950s and developed at the International Frisbee Tournament (IFT) in Marquette, Michigan. The game of ultimate, the most widely played disc game, began in the late 1960s with Joel Silver and Jared Kass. In the 1970s it developed as an organized sport with the creation of the Ultimate Players Association with Dan Roddick, Tom Kennedy and Irv Kalb. Double disc court was invented and introduced in the early 1970s by Jim Palmeri. In 1974, freestyle competition was created and introduced by Ken Westerfield and Discrafts Jim Kenner. In 1976, the game of disc golf was standardized with targets called \"pole holes\" invented and developed by Wham-O's Ed Headrick.",
"Racketlon\n Racketlon is a combination sport in which competitors play a sequence of the four most popular racket sports: table tennis, badminton, squash, and tennis. It originated in Finland and Sweden and was modeled on other combination sports like the triathlon and decathlon.",
"Major women's sport leagues in the United States and Canada\n Each of the leagues represents the highest competition in their respective sports. These major women's sports leagues are considered as the main platoon, not only in the quality of the talents, but also at the play level. The best players of these leagues are icons in their respective sports. Soccer stars include Marta, Abby Wambach, Christine Sinclair, Sam Kerr, and Alex Morgan. Women's ice hockey features Caroline Ouellette, Kim St-Pierre, and Angela Ruggiero, while basketball includes Sue Bird, Elena Delle Donne, Candace Parker, and Breanna Stewart.",
"Sports in Kerala\n Volleyball, another popular sport, is often played on makeshift courts on sandy beaches along the coast. Jimmy George, born in Peravoor, Kannur, was arguably the most successful volleyball player ever to represent India. At his prime he was regarded as among the world's ten best players.",
"Net sport\nracquet sports such as tennis, badminton, pickleball and table tennis (but not squash or racquetball, where players must hit the ball towards a wall). ; volleyball, footvolley, headis, roundnet or sepak takraw, where players must hit the ball with body. A net sport is a sport where a net is a standard part of the game, especially where the net separates the opponents. The object of these games is to hit the ball or bird over the net back to the opponent. Play typically begins with one side serving the ball/bird by initially tossing or releasing it and then hitting it over the net. This then starts a ",
"Flying disc sports\n while the other side will spin into your hand, making for a more secure catch. Many players avoid this problem by catching with both hands when possible. The most popular throws used in a game of ultimate are backhand, sidearm/forehand, hammer and scoober. Being a deep threat, with multiple throwing techniques and the ability to pass the disc before the defense has had a chance to reset, is always optimal. Some players use a throw and catch freestyle practice to help improve their ultimate handling skills. The game was invented in 1968 as an evening pastime by Jared Kass. Ultimate is distinguished by its Spirit of the Game - the principles of fair play, sportsmanship, ",
"Sport in the United Kingdom\n high-profile events featuring a combined team representing one or more nations. Overall, association football attracts the most viewers and money though the nation is notable for the diversity of its sporting interests, especially at the elite level. Major individual sports include athletics, cycling, motorsport, and horse racing. Tennis is the highest profile sport for the two weeks of the Wimbledon Championships, but otherwise struggles to hold its own in the country of its birth. Snooker and darts, too, enjoy period profile boosts in line with the holding of their largest events. Many other sports are also played and followed to a lesser degree. There is much debate over which sport has the most active participants with swimming, athletics, and cycling all found to have wider active participation than association football in the 2010 Sport England Active People survey.",
"Best, Netherlands\nEric Swinkels (born 1949 in Best) sports shooter and silver medallist at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Peter Aerts (born 1970) a Dutch semi-retired super heavyweight kickboxer, trained in Best ; Jesse Mahieu (born 1978 in Best) field hockey defender and team silver medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics ; Dennis Retera (born 1986 in Best) a Dutch racing driver ; Roel van de Sande (born 1987 in Best) a Dutch professional footballer with 250 club caps ",
"Cue sports\n • Outdoor games played on a lawn, field or court, played with varying equipment that may include hoops, pins, holes or other targets or obstacles, and clubs, curved-head sticks, or mallets. Most such games are obsolete, aside from croquet. Golf and field hockey, as well as stick-less games such as bocce, boules and bowls, are historically related. • Croquet (popular lawn game and former Olympic sport) • Jeu de mail (obsolete) • Pall-mall (obsolete) • Trucco (obsolete)",
"Society of the United States\n Since the late nineteenth century, baseball is regarded as the national sport; American football, basketball, and ice hockey are the country's three other leading professional team sports. College football and basketball also attract large audiences. Football is now by several measures the most popular spectator sport in the United States. Soccer, though not a leading professional sport in the country, is played widely at the youth and amateur levels. Boxing and horse racing were once the most watched individual sports, but they have been eclipsed by golf and auto racing, particularly NASCAR. Tennis and many outdoor sports are also popular.",
"Marhi Panuan\n Punjabi Kabaddi, cricket and volleyball are the three most popular sports.",
"Football tennis\n Footballtennis, also known as futnet (in Czech and Slovak nohejbal), is a sport played with a football. It is a ball game that can be played indoors or outdoors in a court divided by a low net with two opposing teams (one, two or three players) who try to score a point hitting the ball with any part of their body except for the hands and making it bounce in the opponent's area in a way that makes it difficult or impossible for the other team to return it over the net."
] |
What sport does Cassiá play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Cassiá | 35,725 | 98 | [
{
"id": "28909684",
"title": "Cassia Pike",
"text": " Cassia Pike (born 27 December 2000 ) is a Welsh professional footballer who plays as a striker for Liverpool F.C. Women of the FA Women's Super League. Pike was born in Porthmadog and has played for Liverpool her entire career.",
"score": "1.7269876"
},
{
"id": "28909685",
"title": "Cassia Pike",
"text": " Pike was born in Porthmadog, Wales. Pike studied BTEC Level 3 Sport (Developing coaching and Fitness) at Coleg Menai.",
"score": "1.6368053"
},
{
"id": "1851741",
"title": "Cassiá",
"text": " Jorge Antônio Dornelles Carpes known as Cassiá (born 14 June 1953 in São Borja) is a retired Brazilian professional football player, who played as defender and a manager.",
"score": "1.6155446"
},
{
"id": "10853532",
"title": "Cierra Burdick",
"text": " Cassidie Cierra Burdick (born September 30, 1993) is an American basketball player for the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA).",
"score": "1.5698109"
},
{
"id": "28909686",
"title": "Cassia Pike",
"text": " Pike joined Liverpool at the age of 9 and has stayed there ever since. In the 2017/18 season, Pike was promoted to the senior team. She made her debut on 5 December 2017 against Sunderland in a 1–0 loss in the WSL Cup coming on for Ashley Hodson in the 76th minute. On 27 January 2018, Pike made her home and league debut in a 2–0 win coming on in the 81st minute for Jessica Clarke.",
"score": "1.564888"
},
{
"id": "12657910",
"title": "Daniela Scalia",
"text": "Volleyball Australian football GAA Cricket Rugby Football Orules and other disabled sports She started playing volleyball at age of 9 after 3 years of gymnastics. She always played in Verona district minor series until 2004. In 2009 she started training and playing Australian football and earned an international cap playing with Italy against Ireland in a friendly during the men's 2010 EU Cup. One year later she created and joined Orules but had to stop due to a damaged knee ligament legacy from volley days. She had an important surgery at 36 years of age in order to improve her training possibility and further her sports career. She represented Italy in the Gaelic Football national team debut against France in Toulouse, November 2014 As of 2016, she was also ",
"score": "1.5064977"
},
{
"id": "31931905",
"title": "Tamires Cássia Dias Gomes",
"text": " Tamires Cássia Dias de Britto (, born 10 October 1987), commonly known as Tamires, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a left-back for Corinthians and the Brazil national team. She participated at the 2015 and 2019 editions of the FIFA Women's World Cup, as well as at the 2016 Olympic Games.",
"score": "1.5003456"
},
{
"id": "938832",
"title": "Susy Cassinova",
"text": " Susy Lineth Cassinova Herrera (born 5 February 1996) is a Panamanian footballer who plays as a forward for Costa Rican club SUVA Sports and the Panama women's national team.",
"score": "1.4948893"
},
{
"id": "30935425",
"title": "Cássia Kis",
"text": " Cássia Kis (born January 6, 1958) is a Brazilian actress. Formerly known as Cássia Kiss, she included her husband's family name in her stage name between 2010 and 2015 and changed the middle pseudonym from Kiss to Kis (Cássia Kis Magro). Currently, her stage name is Cássia Kis.",
"score": "1.4881768"
},
{
"id": "28567048",
"title": "Santia Deck",
"text": " In rugby union she played with the Atlanta Harlequins, Stars Rugby 7s and the Bay of Plenty Rugby Union in New Zealand. She was asked to try out for the USA women's team in Rugby sevens at the Summer Olympics of 2020 but an injury occurred. She joined the Legends Football League (LFL) in 2017. In December 2019 Deck became the first woman to enter into a professional full tackle football contract with a forthcoming all female league - the Women's Football League Association (WFLA). Deck is known online as the 'queen of abs' and hosts her own TV talk show Queen of Abs Fitness. She also appeared in Steve Austin's Broken Skull Ranch, and Blind Date. In July 2020, Deck founded a startup company called Tronus which sells sneakers.",
"score": "1.4768078"
},
{
"id": "31760397",
"title": "Tamara Cassimon",
"text": " Cassimon is for many years active in women's football. She played in the highest division at Brussels Dames 71 and DVK Haacht. But early in her career she had to give up playing due several serious injuries. In 2003 she decided to become a manager at SK Oetingen in the 1e Provincial Division in Vlaams Brabant. In her first year she and the team made the promotion to the 3rd Division. In December 2005 she became manager of Oud-Heverlee Leuven, she became the youngest manager in the highest division. From December 2007 until 2011 she was manager of Sinaai Girls. In the ",
"score": "1.4680657"
},
{
"id": "938833",
"title": "Susy Cassinova",
"text": " Cassinova has appeared for the Panama women's national team, including in the 2020 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Championship on 3 February 2020. She came on as a substitute in the 50th minute for Amarelis De Mera in the match against Haiti.",
"score": "1.465416"
},
{
"id": "10022204",
"title": "Maria Gallo",
"text": " Dr. Maria Eugenia Gallo (born 21 September 1977) is a Canadian rugby player with 55 caps including the 2002 and 2006 Women's Rugby World Cup. A multi-talented athlete, Gallo was also a member of Canada's National Bobsleigh Team for two years (2003–04). She was inducted in the Rugby Canada Hall of Fame in 2018 in the player category. Gallo is the second woman to be inducted into the Rugby Canada Hall of Fame. Gallo is considered one of the top ten North American women rugby union players. Her team nickname is \"the Tank\". Gallo represented Ontario winning the 1997, 1998, 1999, and ",
"score": "1.4643806"
},
{
"id": "31931907",
"title": "Tamires Cássia Dias Gomes",
"text": " Tamires played for the São Paulo select team which represented Brazil at the 2006 Peace Queen Cup. She made her senior debut in September 2013, against New Zealand at the 2013 Valais Women's Cup. In Brazil's next match she scored her first national team goal in a 4–0 win over Mexico. At the 2014 Copa América Femenina, Tamires scored the fifth goal in Brazil's 6–0 rout of Argentina. In February 2015 she was included in an 18-month residency programme intended to prepare the national team for the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada and the 2016 Rio Olympics. At the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Brazil ",
"score": "1.4567262"
},
{
"id": "13270870",
"title": "Mattia Casse",
"text": " Mattia Casse (born 19 February 1990) is an Italian World Cup alpine ski racer. Born in Moncalieri in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, he specializes in the speed events (Downhill and Super-G) and has competed in two World Championships.",
"score": "1.4550669"
},
{
"id": "8147814",
"title": "Vickii Cornborough",
"text": " She began playing rugby as a child and played girls' rugby at clubs along the south coast, including Portsmouth, Havant, Petersfield and the Solent Sirens. She joined Richmond FC as a senior in 2008 and currently plays for Harlequins Women, joining in 2016.",
"score": "1.4468291"
},
{
"id": "30935431",
"title": "Cássia Kis",
"text": "In 1989, she participated in the propaganda of the Ministry of Health about the prevention of the breast cancer. ; In 2006, she was godmother, in Brazil, of the Worldwide Week of Maternal Breast-Feeding. ",
"score": "1.4466212"
},
{
"id": "13788505",
"title": "Georgina Cassar",
"text": " Georgina Cassar (born 9 September 1993) is a Gibraltarian/British rhythmic gymnast. She represented Gibraltar at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, India and competed for Team GB at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom.",
"score": "1.4429797"
},
{
"id": "5005179",
"title": "Corinna Dentoni",
"text": " Father played volleyball in Italian league; both parents are retired. Started playing at age seven because best friend played. She has been training in Rome. Favorite surface is clay, her favorite tournament is French Open. Her tennis idol was Kim Clijsters.",
"score": "1.4429376"
},
{
"id": "9710181",
"title": "Letizia Camera",
"text": " Letizia Camera (born October 1, 1992 in Acqui Terme) is an Italian professional female volleyball player who plays as a setter. As part of the Italy women's national volleyball team she participated in international tournaments such as the FIVB World Grand Prix (in 2012, 2013 and 2015), the 2013 European Championship, the 2015 Montreux Masters and the 2015 European Games. At club level she played for teams in Italy (Asystel Volley, Imoco Volley, Volleyball Casalmaggiore, Futura Volley Busto Arsizio) and France (RC Cannes, Saint-Raphaël Var VB).",
"score": "1.4404964"
}
] | [
"Cassia Pike\n Cassia Pike (born 27 December 2000 ) is a Welsh professional footballer who plays as a striker for Liverpool F.C. Women of the FA Women's Super League. Pike was born in Porthmadog and has played for Liverpool her entire career.",
"Cassia Pike\n Pike was born in Porthmadog, Wales. Pike studied BTEC Level 3 Sport (Developing coaching and Fitness) at Coleg Menai.",
"Cassiá\n Jorge Antônio Dornelles Carpes known as Cassiá (born 14 June 1953 in São Borja) is a retired Brazilian professional football player, who played as defender and a manager.",
"Cierra Burdick\n Cassidie Cierra Burdick (born September 30, 1993) is an American basketball player for the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA).",
"Cassia Pike\n Pike joined Liverpool at the age of 9 and has stayed there ever since. In the 2017/18 season, Pike was promoted to the senior team. She made her debut on 5 December 2017 against Sunderland in a 1–0 loss in the WSL Cup coming on for Ashley Hodson in the 76th minute. On 27 January 2018, Pike made her home and league debut in a 2–0 win coming on in the 81st minute for Jessica Clarke.",
"Daniela Scalia\nVolleyball Australian football GAA Cricket Rugby Football Orules and other disabled sports She started playing volleyball at age of 9 after 3 years of gymnastics. She always played in Verona district minor series until 2004. In 2009 she started training and playing Australian football and earned an international cap playing with Italy against Ireland in a friendly during the men's 2010 EU Cup. One year later she created and joined Orules but had to stop due to a damaged knee ligament legacy from volley days. She had an important surgery at 36 years of age in order to improve her training possibility and further her sports career. She represented Italy in the Gaelic Football national team debut against France in Toulouse, November 2014 As of 2016, she was also ",
"Tamires Cássia Dias Gomes\n Tamires Cássia Dias de Britto (, born 10 October 1987), commonly known as Tamires, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a left-back for Corinthians and the Brazil national team. She participated at the 2015 and 2019 editions of the FIFA Women's World Cup, as well as at the 2016 Olympic Games.",
"Susy Cassinova\n Susy Lineth Cassinova Herrera (born 5 February 1996) is a Panamanian footballer who plays as a forward for Costa Rican club SUVA Sports and the Panama women's national team.",
"Cássia Kis\n Cássia Kis (born January 6, 1958) is a Brazilian actress. Formerly known as Cássia Kiss, she included her husband's family name in her stage name between 2010 and 2015 and changed the middle pseudonym from Kiss to Kis (Cássia Kis Magro). Currently, her stage name is Cássia Kis.",
"Santia Deck\n In rugby union she played with the Atlanta Harlequins, Stars Rugby 7s and the Bay of Plenty Rugby Union in New Zealand. She was asked to try out for the USA women's team in Rugby sevens at the Summer Olympics of 2020 but an injury occurred. She joined the Legends Football League (LFL) in 2017. In December 2019 Deck became the first woman to enter into a professional full tackle football contract with a forthcoming all female league - the Women's Football League Association (WFLA). Deck is known online as the 'queen of abs' and hosts her own TV talk show Queen of Abs Fitness. She also appeared in Steve Austin's Broken Skull Ranch, and Blind Date. In July 2020, Deck founded a startup company called Tronus which sells sneakers.",
"Tamara Cassimon\n Cassimon is for many years active in women's football. She played in the highest division at Brussels Dames 71 and DVK Haacht. But early in her career she had to give up playing due several serious injuries. In 2003 she decided to become a manager at SK Oetingen in the 1e Provincial Division in Vlaams Brabant. In her first year she and the team made the promotion to the 3rd Division. In December 2005 she became manager of Oud-Heverlee Leuven, she became the youngest manager in the highest division. From December 2007 until 2011 she was manager of Sinaai Girls. In the ",
"Susy Cassinova\n Cassinova has appeared for the Panama women's national team, including in the 2020 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Championship on 3 February 2020. She came on as a substitute in the 50th minute for Amarelis De Mera in the match against Haiti.",
"Maria Gallo\n Dr. Maria Eugenia Gallo (born 21 September 1977) is a Canadian rugby player with 55 caps including the 2002 and 2006 Women's Rugby World Cup. A multi-talented athlete, Gallo was also a member of Canada's National Bobsleigh Team for two years (2003–04). She was inducted in the Rugby Canada Hall of Fame in 2018 in the player category. Gallo is the second woman to be inducted into the Rugby Canada Hall of Fame. Gallo is considered one of the top ten North American women rugby union players. Her team nickname is \"the Tank\". Gallo represented Ontario winning the 1997, 1998, 1999, and ",
"Tamires Cássia Dias Gomes\n Tamires played for the São Paulo select team which represented Brazil at the 2006 Peace Queen Cup. She made her senior debut in September 2013, against New Zealand at the 2013 Valais Women's Cup. In Brazil's next match she scored her first national team goal in a 4–0 win over Mexico. At the 2014 Copa América Femenina, Tamires scored the fifth goal in Brazil's 6–0 rout of Argentina. In February 2015 she was included in an 18-month residency programme intended to prepare the national team for the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada and the 2016 Rio Olympics. At the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Brazil ",
"Mattia Casse\n Mattia Casse (born 19 February 1990) is an Italian World Cup alpine ski racer. Born in Moncalieri in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, he specializes in the speed events (Downhill and Super-G) and has competed in two World Championships.",
"Vickii Cornborough\n She began playing rugby as a child and played girls' rugby at clubs along the south coast, including Portsmouth, Havant, Petersfield and the Solent Sirens. She joined Richmond FC as a senior in 2008 and currently plays for Harlequins Women, joining in 2016.",
"Cássia Kis\nIn 1989, she participated in the propaganda of the Ministry of Health about the prevention of the breast cancer. ; In 2006, she was godmother, in Brazil, of the Worldwide Week of Maternal Breast-Feeding. ",
"Georgina Cassar\n Georgina Cassar (born 9 September 1993) is a Gibraltarian/British rhythmic gymnast. She represented Gibraltar at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, India and competed for Team GB at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom.",
"Corinna Dentoni\n Father played volleyball in Italian league; both parents are retired. Started playing at age seven because best friend played. She has been training in Rome. Favorite surface is clay, her favorite tournament is French Open. Her tennis idol was Kim Clijsters.",
"Letizia Camera\n Letizia Camera (born October 1, 1992 in Acqui Terme) is an Italian professional female volleyball player who plays as a setter. As part of the Italy women's national volleyball team she participated in international tournaments such as the FIVB World Grand Prix (in 2012, 2013 and 2015), the 2013 European Championship, the 2015 Montreux Masters and the 2015 European Games. At club level she played for teams in Italy (Asystel Volley, Imoco Volley, Volleyball Casalmaggiore, Futura Volley Busto Arsizio) and France (RC Cannes, Saint-Raphaël Var VB)."
] |
What sport does Adrian Olah play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Adrian Olah | 2,151,362 | 71 | [
{
"id": "14085081",
"title": "Adrian Olah",
"text": " Adrian Olah (born 30 April 1981 in Târgu Mureș) is a former Romanian footballer who played as a defender and as a midfielder. He is a currently the manager of the youth squad Juvenes Târgu Mureș.",
"score": "1.7047634"
},
{
"id": "14085082",
"title": "Adrian Olah",
"text": " Olah made his debut in the Divizia A during the 1998/1999 season at FC Național where he kept on playing until the summer of 2005, when he moved to FCU Politehnica Timișoara as part of the deal which had brought Gigel Coman, Gabriel Cânu, Marius Popa and Gabriel Caramarin to Timișoara earlier that year.",
"score": "1.6901679"
},
{
"id": "4130586",
"title": "Adrian Carambula",
"text": " Adrian Ignacio Carambula Raurich (born 16 March 1988) is a Uruguay-born italian beach volleyball player. Born in Uruguay, he played football alongside Luis Suárez as a boy, until his family moved to Florida when he was a teenager. He qualifies to represent Italy through his maternal grandmother, originally from Turin. He is known as \"Mr Skyball\" for his unique serving style, in which he hits the ball high. The theme from the James Bond film Skyfall plays when he serves. Ranked third in the world as a pair, Carambula partnered Alex Ranghieri at the 2016 Olympics. Since 2018, Carambula plays together with Enrico Rossi.",
"score": "1.5897789"
},
{
"id": "6242197",
"title": "Alexandru Olah",
"text": " Alexandru Lucian Olah (born 15 October 1993) is a Romanian basketball player for BC Timișoara of the Liga Națională. He also plays for the Romanian national team.",
"score": "1.5598445"
},
{
"id": "9497903",
"title": "Benedek Oláh",
"text": " Benedek Oláh (born 29 March 1991) is a Finnish table tennis player. He competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the men's singles event, in which he was eliminated in the second round by Jonathan Groth. Oláh was born to Hungarian parents in Kalajoki, Finland, but grew up in Seinäjoki.",
"score": "1.5565213"
},
{
"id": "6242198",
"title": "Alexandru Olah",
"text": " On 20 January 2018, Olah signed a 2-week try-out contract with ZZ Leiden of the Dutch Basketball League (DBL). On 4 February, Leiden signed him for the remainder of the season.",
"score": "1.5537901"
},
{
"id": "6242199",
"title": "Alexandru Olah",
"text": " Olah participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"score": "1.5484135"
},
{
"id": "25362614",
"title": "Adrián Aldrete",
"text": " Aldrete participated in the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games and was one of the youngest members on the team, being age 18. Mexico was eliminated in a quarter-final round match against Honduras.",
"score": "1.5430183"
},
{
"id": "9505230",
"title": "Ehire Adrianza",
"text": " Adrianza began his professional career in 2006, playing for the DSL Giants and hitting .156 in 122 at-bats. In 2007, he played again for the DSL Giants, improving his batting average to .241 in 249 at-bats, stealing 23 bases in 29 attempts. Adrianza played in the United States for the first time in 2008, splitting the season between three teams – the AZL Giants (15 games), Salem-Keizer Volcanoes (one game) and the Fresno Grizzlies (two games). Overall, he hit a combined .288 in 66 at-bats. After hitting .258 in 388 at-bats for the Augusta Greenjackets in 2009, Adrianza helped the San Jose Giants win the ",
"score": "1.5354602"
},
{
"id": "29582089",
"title": "Adrian Olenici",
"text": " Adrian Olenici (born April 19, 1956) is a former Romanian ice hockey player. He played for the Romania men's national ice hockey team at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.",
"score": "1.5330442"
},
{
"id": "28050005",
"title": "Thompson Oliha",
"text": " Oliha played for Bendel Insurance (1985–1987), Iwuanyanwu Nationale (1988–1991), Africa Sports (1992–1993), Maccabi Ironi Ashdod (1993–1994) and Antalyaspor (1994–1995). As a player, he was known for his powerful shots and abilities in the air. Oliha retired at the age of 27, as a result of a serious knee injury.",
"score": "1.5282406"
},
{
"id": "16430189",
"title": "Adrian Awasom",
"text": " Awasom was born in Cameroon and moved with his family to the United States when he was four, growing up in Fort Bend County, Texas. Awasom attended Stafford High School where he was a three-sport start in football, basketball, and track. A two time All-District member and caught 22 passes for 350 yards at tight end as a senior. As a member of the basketball team, Awasom was a two-time All-State member averaging 16.7 ppg and 16.7 rpg as a senior and also earning All-Area honors. In track, he was a two-time All-State performer with a personal best of 189'74\". Awasom is one of three players from Stafford HS to play in the NFL, others being Boris Anyama and Craig Robertson.",
"score": "1.5211148"
},
{
"id": "2786115",
"title": "Adrian Rochet",
"text": " Adrian Rochet (אדריאן רוצ'ט, born on March 26, 1987) is an Israel football player who plays for Ironi Kiryat Shmona.",
"score": "1.519437"
},
{
"id": "16430188",
"title": "Adrian Awasom",
"text": " Adrian Awasom (born October 25, 1983) is a former American football defensive end. He was a member of the Toronto Argonauts of the CFL and the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League. He was signed by the New York Giants as an undrafted free agent in 2005. He played college football at North Texas.",
"score": "1.5094087"
},
{
"id": "9505231",
"title": "Ehire Adrianza",
"text": " League Championship in 2010. He hit .256 in 445 at-bats, stealing 33 bases in 48 attempts. He would remain in San Jose during the bulk of the 2011 season. In 2011, Adrianza batted .300 with 3 home runs and 27 RBIs. Adrianza made his MLB debut on September 8, 2013, against the Arizona Diamondbacks, and in doing so became the 300th Venezuelan to play in Major League Baseball. He entered the game as a pinch runner in the 11th inning and scored the winning run in a 3–2 victory. Adrianza hit his first career home run on September 22, 2013 against the New York Yankees. ",
"score": "1.5068215"
},
{
"id": "835759",
"title": "Adrian",
"text": " ; Adrian Avrămia (born 1992), Romanian footballer ; Adrian Aucoin (born 1973), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Adrian Awasom (born 1983), Cameroon-born American football player ; Adrian Aymes (born 1964), British cricketer ; Adrian Banks (born 1986), American basketball player, 2011-12 top scorer in the Israel Basketball Premier League ; Adrian Barath (born 1990), West Indian cricketer ; Adrián Bastía (born 1978), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Beltré (born 1979), Dominican Republic baseball player ; Adrián Berbia (born 1977), Uruguayan goalkeeper ; Adrián Bone (born 1988), Ecuadorian footballer ; Adrian Boothroyd (born 1971), English footballer and manager ; Adrian Branch (born 1963), ",
"score": "1.4997652"
},
{
"id": "7133082",
"title": "László Oláh",
"text": " László Dávid Oláh (born 16 December 1995) is a Hungarian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Békéscsaba 1912 Előre.",
"score": "1.4922156"
},
{
"id": "294018",
"title": "Obinna Oleka",
"text": " Oleka grew up in Washington, D.C. with his mother and brother. He played high school basketball at Florida Christian Institute in Cape Coral, Florida, where he averaged 24 points and 11 rebounds as a senior. He also played AAU ball with DC Assault.",
"score": "1.4892678"
},
{
"id": "835762",
"title": "Adrian",
"text": " (born 1988), Spanish footballer ; Adrian Griffin (born 1974), American retired NBA player ; Adrián Gunino (born 1989), Uruguayan footballer ; Adrian Gunnell (born 1972), English snooker player ; Adrian Heath (born 1961), English football manager and former player ; Adrián Hernández (boxer) (born 1986), Mexican boxer ; Adrian Iencsi (born 1975), Romanian football player and manager ; Adrian Ilie (born 1974), Romanian retired footballer ; Adrian Joss (1880–1911), American baseball pitcher ; Adrian Killins (born 1998), American football player ; Adrian Knup (born 1968), Swiss footballer ; Adrian Kurek (born 1988), Polish road bicycle racer ; Adrian Leijer (born 1986), ",
"score": "1.4806657"
},
{
"id": "835760",
"title": "Adrian",
"text": " basketball player ; Adrian Bumbescu (born 1960), Romanian footballer ; Adrian Burnside (born 1977), Australian baseball player ; Adrian Caldwell (born 1966), American basketball player ; Adrián Calello (born 1987), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Campos (1960-2021), Spanish Formula One driver ; Adrian Cann (born 1980), Canadian Major League Soccer player ; Adrián Centurión (born 1993), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Chávez (born 1962), Mexican footballer ; Adrian Colbert (born 1993), American football player ; Adrián Colunga (born 1984), Spanish footballer ; Adrian Cosma (born 1950), Romanian handball player ; Adrian Crișan (born 1980), Romanian table tennis player ; Adrian Cristea (born 1983), Romanian ",
"score": "1.4783943"
}
] | [
"Adrian Olah\n Adrian Olah (born 30 April 1981 in Târgu Mureș) is a former Romanian footballer who played as a defender and as a midfielder. He is a currently the manager of the youth squad Juvenes Târgu Mureș.",
"Adrian Olah\n Olah made his debut in the Divizia A during the 1998/1999 season at FC Național where he kept on playing until the summer of 2005, when he moved to FCU Politehnica Timișoara as part of the deal which had brought Gigel Coman, Gabriel Cânu, Marius Popa and Gabriel Caramarin to Timișoara earlier that year.",
"Adrian Carambula\n Adrian Ignacio Carambula Raurich (born 16 March 1988) is a Uruguay-born italian beach volleyball player. Born in Uruguay, he played football alongside Luis Suárez as a boy, until his family moved to Florida when he was a teenager. He qualifies to represent Italy through his maternal grandmother, originally from Turin. He is known as \"Mr Skyball\" for his unique serving style, in which he hits the ball high. The theme from the James Bond film Skyfall plays when he serves. Ranked third in the world as a pair, Carambula partnered Alex Ranghieri at the 2016 Olympics. Since 2018, Carambula plays together with Enrico Rossi.",
"Alexandru Olah\n Alexandru Lucian Olah (born 15 October 1993) is a Romanian basketball player for BC Timișoara of the Liga Națională. He also plays for the Romanian national team.",
"Benedek Oláh\n Benedek Oláh (born 29 March 1991) is a Finnish table tennis player. He competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the men's singles event, in which he was eliminated in the second round by Jonathan Groth. Oláh was born to Hungarian parents in Kalajoki, Finland, but grew up in Seinäjoki.",
"Alexandru Olah\n On 20 January 2018, Olah signed a 2-week try-out contract with ZZ Leiden of the Dutch Basketball League (DBL). On 4 February, Leiden signed him for the remainder of the season.",
"Alexandru Olah\n Olah participated at the EuroBasket 2017.",
"Adrián Aldrete\n Aldrete participated in the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games and was one of the youngest members on the team, being age 18. Mexico was eliminated in a quarter-final round match against Honduras.",
"Ehire Adrianza\n Adrianza began his professional career in 2006, playing for the DSL Giants and hitting .156 in 122 at-bats. In 2007, he played again for the DSL Giants, improving his batting average to .241 in 249 at-bats, stealing 23 bases in 29 attempts. Adrianza played in the United States for the first time in 2008, splitting the season between three teams – the AZL Giants (15 games), Salem-Keizer Volcanoes (one game) and the Fresno Grizzlies (two games). Overall, he hit a combined .288 in 66 at-bats. After hitting .258 in 388 at-bats for the Augusta Greenjackets in 2009, Adrianza helped the San Jose Giants win the ",
"Adrian Olenici\n Adrian Olenici (born April 19, 1956) is a former Romanian ice hockey player. He played for the Romania men's national ice hockey team at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.",
"Thompson Oliha\n Oliha played for Bendel Insurance (1985–1987), Iwuanyanwu Nationale (1988–1991), Africa Sports (1992–1993), Maccabi Ironi Ashdod (1993–1994) and Antalyaspor (1994–1995). As a player, he was known for his powerful shots and abilities in the air. Oliha retired at the age of 27, as a result of a serious knee injury.",
"Adrian Awasom\n Awasom was born in Cameroon and moved with his family to the United States when he was four, growing up in Fort Bend County, Texas. Awasom attended Stafford High School where he was a three-sport start in football, basketball, and track. A two time All-District member and caught 22 passes for 350 yards at tight end as a senior. As a member of the basketball team, Awasom was a two-time All-State member averaging 16.7 ppg and 16.7 rpg as a senior and also earning All-Area honors. In track, he was a two-time All-State performer with a personal best of 189'74\". Awasom is one of three players from Stafford HS to play in the NFL, others being Boris Anyama and Craig Robertson.",
"Adrian Rochet\n Adrian Rochet (אדריאן רוצ'ט, born on March 26, 1987) is an Israel football player who plays for Ironi Kiryat Shmona.",
"Adrian Awasom\n Adrian Awasom (born October 25, 1983) is a former American football defensive end. He was a member of the Toronto Argonauts of the CFL and the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League. He was signed by the New York Giants as an undrafted free agent in 2005. He played college football at North Texas.",
"Ehire Adrianza\n League Championship in 2010. He hit .256 in 445 at-bats, stealing 33 bases in 48 attempts. He would remain in San Jose during the bulk of the 2011 season. In 2011, Adrianza batted .300 with 3 home runs and 27 RBIs. Adrianza made his MLB debut on September 8, 2013, against the Arizona Diamondbacks, and in doing so became the 300th Venezuelan to play in Major League Baseball. He entered the game as a pinch runner in the 11th inning and scored the winning run in a 3–2 victory. Adrianza hit his first career home run on September 22, 2013 against the New York Yankees. ",
"Adrian\n ; Adrian Avrămia (born 1992), Romanian footballer ; Adrian Aucoin (born 1973), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Adrian Awasom (born 1983), Cameroon-born American football player ; Adrian Aymes (born 1964), British cricketer ; Adrian Banks (born 1986), American basketball player, 2011-12 top scorer in the Israel Basketball Premier League ; Adrian Barath (born 1990), West Indian cricketer ; Adrián Bastía (born 1978), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Beltré (born 1979), Dominican Republic baseball player ; Adrián Berbia (born 1977), Uruguayan goalkeeper ; Adrián Bone (born 1988), Ecuadorian footballer ; Adrian Boothroyd (born 1971), English footballer and manager ; Adrian Branch (born 1963), ",
"László Oláh\n László Dávid Oláh (born 16 December 1995) is a Hungarian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Békéscsaba 1912 Előre.",
"Obinna Oleka\n Oleka grew up in Washington, D.C. with his mother and brother. He played high school basketball at Florida Christian Institute in Cape Coral, Florida, where he averaged 24 points and 11 rebounds as a senior. He also played AAU ball with DC Assault.",
"Adrian\n (born 1988), Spanish footballer ; Adrian Griffin (born 1974), American retired NBA player ; Adrián Gunino (born 1989), Uruguayan footballer ; Adrian Gunnell (born 1972), English snooker player ; Adrian Heath (born 1961), English football manager and former player ; Adrián Hernández (boxer) (born 1986), Mexican boxer ; Adrian Iencsi (born 1975), Romanian football player and manager ; Adrian Ilie (born 1974), Romanian retired footballer ; Adrian Joss (1880–1911), American baseball pitcher ; Adrian Killins (born 1998), American football player ; Adrian Knup (born 1968), Swiss footballer ; Adrian Kurek (born 1988), Polish road bicycle racer ; Adrian Leijer (born 1986), ",
"Adrian\n basketball player ; Adrian Bumbescu (born 1960), Romanian footballer ; Adrian Burnside (born 1977), Australian baseball player ; Adrian Caldwell (born 1966), American basketball player ; Adrián Calello (born 1987), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Campos (1960-2021), Spanish Formula One driver ; Adrian Cann (born 1980), Canadian Major League Soccer player ; Adrián Centurión (born 1993), Argentine footballer ; Adrián Chávez (born 1962), Mexican footballer ; Adrian Colbert (born 1993), American football player ; Adrián Colunga (born 1984), Spanish footballer ; Adrian Cosma (born 1950), Romanian handball player ; Adrian Crișan (born 1980), Romanian table tennis player ; Adrian Cristea (born 1983), Romanian "
] |
What sport does José Diogo Macedo Silva play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Didi (footballer, born 1994) | 1,412,286 | 41 | [
{
"id": "33003762",
"title": "Diogo Silva (footballer, born 1986)",
"text": " Diogo José Gonçalves da Silva (born 8 July 1986) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for CRB.",
"score": "1.6335094"
},
{
"id": "33003763",
"title": "Diogo Silva (footballer, born 1986)",
"text": "Nova Iguaçu ; Copa Rio: 2008 Vasco da Gama ; Copa do Brasil: 2011 ; Campeonato Carioca: 2016 Luverdense ; Copa Verde: 2017 ",
"score": "1.588127"
},
{
"id": "3418005",
"title": "Meldon D'Silva",
"text": " In 2014, D'Silva represented the Goan–India team during the Lusophony Games. He scored the opening goal for Goa–India in the gold medal match against Mozambique as the Goan side won 3–2.",
"score": "1.583309"
},
{
"id": "12471246",
"title": "David Mendes da Silva",
"text": " David Miquel Mendes da Silva Gonçalves (born 4 August 1982) is a Dutch former professional footballer of Cape Verdean descent. During his career, he played for Red Bull Salzburg, AZ, Sparta Rotterdam, Ajax, Panathinaikos and NAC Breda. He was a versatile player who could play all over midfield and in defence, and was known for his dribbling technique as well as his tackling.",
"score": "1.5818841"
},
{
"id": "8433408",
"title": "Diogo Rosado",
"text": " Diogo Jorge Rosado (born 21 February 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Leça F.C. as a midfielder. Formed at Sporting CP, he made 32 Primeira Liga appearances with Feirense, Vitória de Setúbal and Paços de Ferreira, as well as 20 in the second tier for Penafiel and Benfica B. He spent much of his career abroad, in brief spells in England, France, Cyprus, Angola and Romania.",
"score": "1.5534852"
},
{
"id": "25482788",
"title": "Diogo Mateus",
"text": " Diogo Pereira Mateus (born Lisbon, February 7, 1980) is a Portuguese rugby union player. He played as a centre. He came through the ranks at Belenenses (after a stint at \"Clube dos TLP\"), he was on the books with Heineken Cup champions Munster in the 2006/07 season. He is 1.75 m tall and weighs 93 kg. He has a twin brother David Mateus, who was also a rugby player. He had 75 caps for Portugal, from 2000 to 2010, scoring 15 tries and 1 penalty, 78 points on aggregate. He was called for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, playing in three games and remaining scoreless. He was also a notable 7's player, being captain of the Portuguese national Sevens rugby team.",
"score": "1.5520484"
},
{
"id": "2479739",
"title": "José de Bastos",
"text": " Born in Albergaria-a-Velha, Bastos was a keen athlete, participating in the high jump (jumping 1.75 m) and running events. He later turned to football and played for the Desportivo de Castelo and Benfica youth teams. He initially went for trials at Benfica as a field player among 500 other children, but when the chosen goalkeeper was injured he took over and was selected.",
"score": "1.5436101"
},
{
"id": "1353057",
"title": "José da Silva (canoeist)",
"text": " José António Silva (born October 27, 1971) is a Portuguese sprint canoer who competed in the early 1990s. At the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, he was eliminated in the semifinals of both the K-2 500 m and the K-2 1000 m events.",
"score": "1.5400932"
},
{
"id": "3929334",
"title": "Diogo Galvão",
"text": " Diogo Galvão de Macedo, the Diogo Galvão (born March 7, 1982) is a Brazilian football striker.",
"score": "1.5375736"
},
{
"id": "9470572",
"title": "Erlon Silva",
"text": " In 2014, de Souza Silva won a World Championship bronze medal in the men's C2 200 m with Isaquias Queiroz. A year later, that team won World Championship gold in the C2 1000 m. This team also won a silver medal at the 2016 Olympics in the C2 1000 m. At the following World Championships, the team were unable to defend their title, finishing in 4th place in the final. In 2018, Silva and Queiroz won World Championship gold again, this time in the C2 500 m. In 2019, the team won World Championship bronze, this time at the C2 1000 m. A hip injury prevented Silva from attending the 2020 Summer Olympics, forcing Jacky Godmann to take his place as Queiroz's partner.",
"score": "1.5367582"
},
{
"id": "27994321",
"title": "Manuel Silva (sport shooter)",
"text": " Manuel Moura Vieira da Silva (born November 16, 1971 in Porto) is a Portuguese sport shooter. He won a bronze medal at the 1999 ISSF World Shotgun Championships in Tampere, Finland, and eventually captured a total of six medals (one gold, two silver, and three bronze) for the men's trap shooting at the ISSF World Cup series. He also competed in the mixed trap shooting at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and men's trap at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Twelve years after competing in his last Olympics, Silva qualified for his third Portuguese team, as a 36-year-old, at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, by winning the silver medal from the first meet of the 2006 ISSF World Cup series in Qingyuan, China, with a score of 145 points. He finished only in twenty-seventh place by one point behind Canada's Giuseppe di Salvatore, for a total score of 111 targets.",
"score": "1.5235271"
},
{
"id": "9188266",
"title": "Silva",
"text": "Carlos Silva (baseball), Venezuelan baseball player ; Chandrika de Silva, Sri Lankan badminton player ; Cherantha de Silva, Sri Lankan Sinhalese swimmer ; Daniel Silva (golfer), Portuguese golfer ; Eden Giselle Silva, Sri Lankan Briton tennis player ; Emanuel Silva, Portuguese flatwater canoeist ; Eurico Rosa da Silva, Brazilian-born Canadian jockey ; Fabiola da Silva, Brazilian inline skater ; Frederico Ferreira Silva, Portuguese tennis player ; Garth da Silva, New Zealand boxer ; Inoka Rohini de Silva, Sri Lankan badminton player ; Jamie Silva, American football safety ; John da Silva, New Zealand wrestler and boxer ; Luís Mena e Silva, Portuguese horse rider ; Neuza Silva, Portuguese tennis player ; Raquel Silva, Brazilian volleyball player ; Roberto Silva Nazzari, Uruguayan chess master ; Rogério Dutra Silva, Brazilian tennis player ",
"score": "1.5198612"
},
{
"id": "29151877",
"title": "Diogo Antunes",
"text": " Diogo José Pereira de Fortunato Antunes (born 2 November 1992 in Oeiras) is a Portuguese sprinter competing primarily in the 100 metres. He represented his country at three consecutive European Championships.",
"score": "1.5194366"
},
{
"id": "27470727",
"title": "List of Brazilian sportspeople",
"text": "Diogo Silva (born 1982) ; Natália Falavigna (born 1984) ",
"score": "1.5182817"
},
{
"id": "71870",
"title": "Luis Cardoso da Silva",
"text": " Silva won his fifth world championship in 2017 in the men's VL1 event, surpassing Fernando Fernandes de Pádua for the most by a Brazilian. Silva represented Brazil at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in the men's KL1 event and finished in fourth place with a time 51.631. He again represented Brazil at the 2020 Summer Paralympics in the men's KL1 event and finished with a time of 48.031 and won a silver medal.",
"score": "1.5180372"
},
{
"id": "13005501",
"title": "Oeiras, Portugal",
"text": "Fernando Peres (1943–2019) a footballer and manager with 314 club caps and 27 for Portugal ; Nélson Moutinho (born 1959) a Portuguese former footballer with 424 club caps ; Ricardo Pedroso (born 1977) middle-distance freestyle swimmer, competed at 2000 Summer Olympics ; Sérgio Paulinho (born 1980) a Portuguese road bicycle racer ; Marcos Chuva (born 1989) a long jumper, competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics ; Diogo Antunes (born 1992) a Portuguese 100 metres sprinter ; Daniel Podence (born 1995) a footballer who plays for Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. and has almost 200 club caps ",
"score": "1.5137193"
},
{
"id": "26826421",
"title": "Clodoaldo Silva",
"text": " Clodoaldo Silva (born 1 February 1979) is a Brazilian swimmer. He competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, winning three silver medals and one bronze. He competed again at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, where he set four world records, five Paralympic records, and won six gold medals and one silver. He also represented Brazil at the 2008, 2012 and 2016 Paralympics, and lit the Paralympic cauldron at the 2016 Summer Paralympics opening ceremony. In 2005, he was given the Best Male Athlete award by the International Paralympic Committee, the Best Female Athlete award going to Japan's Mayumi Narita. Silva has cerebral palsy, and took up swimming in 1996 as part of his rehabilitation. He is married and has a daughter Anita. At the 2016 Summer Paralympics he took a silver medal in the Mixed 4x50m Freestyle Relay. His teammates were Daniel Dias, Edenia Garcia, Susana Ribeiro, Talisson Glock, Maiara Regina Perreira Barreto, Joana Maria Silva and Patricia Pereira dos Santos. Silva was also the final torchbearer and lit the cauldron during the opening ceremony.",
"score": "1.5122439"
},
{
"id": "4766343",
"title": "Pepe Gonçalves",
"text": " Raised in Piraju, da Silva got interested in canoeing after seeing the Brazilian team that would participate in the 2004 Summer Olympics practice in his city. He joined a social project that taught the sport in the Paranapanema River, and got moved to sailing for a year due to his low stature, but his abilities in the kayak soon convinced his teachers. Once moved from sprint to slalom, Gonçalves won his first Brazilian championship in 2011, nearly qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics - missing the qualifying time by 0.13 seconds - and got a silver medal at the 2015 Pan American Games.",
"score": "1.510704"
},
{
"id": "2619798",
"title": "Diogo Pereira (volleyball)",
"text": " Diogo Pereira (born June 21, 1997) is a Portuguese male volleyball player. He is part of the Portugal men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for VC Viana.",
"score": "1.5098488"
},
{
"id": "9804060",
"title": "Víctor Diogo",
"text": " Víctor Hugo Diogo Silva (born April 9, 1958 in Treinta y Tres) is a retired football defender from Uruguay. He played in 33 games for the Uruguay national football team, scoring one goal. Diogo played club football for Peñarol in Uruguay. He made his international debut on September 20, 1979 in a Copa América match against Paraguay (0-0) in Asunción. Diogo was a member of the team that competed at the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. Between 1986 and 1989 he played for Palmeiras of Brazil.",
"score": "1.5083454"
}
] | [
"Diogo Silva (footballer, born 1986)\n Diogo José Gonçalves da Silva (born 8 July 1986) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for CRB.",
"Diogo Silva (footballer, born 1986)\nNova Iguaçu ; Copa Rio: 2008 Vasco da Gama ; Copa do Brasil: 2011 ; Campeonato Carioca: 2016 Luverdense ; Copa Verde: 2017 ",
"Meldon D'Silva\n In 2014, D'Silva represented the Goan–India team during the Lusophony Games. He scored the opening goal for Goa–India in the gold medal match against Mozambique as the Goan side won 3–2.",
"David Mendes da Silva\n David Miquel Mendes da Silva Gonçalves (born 4 August 1982) is a Dutch former professional footballer of Cape Verdean descent. During his career, he played for Red Bull Salzburg, AZ, Sparta Rotterdam, Ajax, Panathinaikos and NAC Breda. He was a versatile player who could play all over midfield and in defence, and was known for his dribbling technique as well as his tackling.",
"Diogo Rosado\n Diogo Jorge Rosado (born 21 February 1990) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Leça F.C. as a midfielder. Formed at Sporting CP, he made 32 Primeira Liga appearances with Feirense, Vitória de Setúbal and Paços de Ferreira, as well as 20 in the second tier for Penafiel and Benfica B. He spent much of his career abroad, in brief spells in England, France, Cyprus, Angola and Romania.",
"Diogo Mateus\n Diogo Pereira Mateus (born Lisbon, February 7, 1980) is a Portuguese rugby union player. He played as a centre. He came through the ranks at Belenenses (after a stint at \"Clube dos TLP\"), he was on the books with Heineken Cup champions Munster in the 2006/07 season. He is 1.75 m tall and weighs 93 kg. He has a twin brother David Mateus, who was also a rugby player. He had 75 caps for Portugal, from 2000 to 2010, scoring 15 tries and 1 penalty, 78 points on aggregate. He was called for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, playing in three games and remaining scoreless. He was also a notable 7's player, being captain of the Portuguese national Sevens rugby team.",
"José de Bastos\n Born in Albergaria-a-Velha, Bastos was a keen athlete, participating in the high jump (jumping 1.75 m) and running events. He later turned to football and played for the Desportivo de Castelo and Benfica youth teams. He initially went for trials at Benfica as a field player among 500 other children, but when the chosen goalkeeper was injured he took over and was selected.",
"José da Silva (canoeist)\n José António Silva (born October 27, 1971) is a Portuguese sprint canoer who competed in the early 1990s. At the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, he was eliminated in the semifinals of both the K-2 500 m and the K-2 1000 m events.",
"Diogo Galvão\n Diogo Galvão de Macedo, the Diogo Galvão (born March 7, 1982) is a Brazilian football striker.",
"Erlon Silva\n In 2014, de Souza Silva won a World Championship bronze medal in the men's C2 200 m with Isaquias Queiroz. A year later, that team won World Championship gold in the C2 1000 m. This team also won a silver medal at the 2016 Olympics in the C2 1000 m. At the following World Championships, the team were unable to defend their title, finishing in 4th place in the final. In 2018, Silva and Queiroz won World Championship gold again, this time in the C2 500 m. In 2019, the team won World Championship bronze, this time at the C2 1000 m. A hip injury prevented Silva from attending the 2020 Summer Olympics, forcing Jacky Godmann to take his place as Queiroz's partner.",
"Manuel Silva (sport shooter)\n Manuel Moura Vieira da Silva (born November 16, 1971 in Porto) is a Portuguese sport shooter. He won a bronze medal at the 1999 ISSF World Shotgun Championships in Tampere, Finland, and eventually captured a total of six medals (one gold, two silver, and three bronze) for the men's trap shooting at the ISSF World Cup series. He also competed in the mixed trap shooting at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and men's trap at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Twelve years after competing in his last Olympics, Silva qualified for his third Portuguese team, as a 36-year-old, at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, by winning the silver medal from the first meet of the 2006 ISSF World Cup series in Qingyuan, China, with a score of 145 points. He finished only in twenty-seventh place by one point behind Canada's Giuseppe di Salvatore, for a total score of 111 targets.",
"Silva\nCarlos Silva (baseball), Venezuelan baseball player ; Chandrika de Silva, Sri Lankan badminton player ; Cherantha de Silva, Sri Lankan Sinhalese swimmer ; Daniel Silva (golfer), Portuguese golfer ; Eden Giselle Silva, Sri Lankan Briton tennis player ; Emanuel Silva, Portuguese flatwater canoeist ; Eurico Rosa da Silva, Brazilian-born Canadian jockey ; Fabiola da Silva, Brazilian inline skater ; Frederico Ferreira Silva, Portuguese tennis player ; Garth da Silva, New Zealand boxer ; Inoka Rohini de Silva, Sri Lankan badminton player ; Jamie Silva, American football safety ; John da Silva, New Zealand wrestler and boxer ; Luís Mena e Silva, Portuguese horse rider ; Neuza Silva, Portuguese tennis player ; Raquel Silva, Brazilian volleyball player ; Roberto Silva Nazzari, Uruguayan chess master ; Rogério Dutra Silva, Brazilian tennis player ",
"Diogo Antunes\n Diogo José Pereira de Fortunato Antunes (born 2 November 1992 in Oeiras) is a Portuguese sprinter competing primarily in the 100 metres. He represented his country at three consecutive European Championships.",
"List of Brazilian sportspeople\nDiogo Silva (born 1982) ; Natália Falavigna (born 1984) ",
"Luis Cardoso da Silva\n Silva won his fifth world championship in 2017 in the men's VL1 event, surpassing Fernando Fernandes de Pádua for the most by a Brazilian. Silva represented Brazil at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in the men's KL1 event and finished in fourth place with a time 51.631. He again represented Brazil at the 2020 Summer Paralympics in the men's KL1 event and finished with a time of 48.031 and won a silver medal.",
"Oeiras, Portugal\nFernando Peres (1943–2019) a footballer and manager with 314 club caps and 27 for Portugal ; Nélson Moutinho (born 1959) a Portuguese former footballer with 424 club caps ; Ricardo Pedroso (born 1977) middle-distance freestyle swimmer, competed at 2000 Summer Olympics ; Sérgio Paulinho (born 1980) a Portuguese road bicycle racer ; Marcos Chuva (born 1989) a long jumper, competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics ; Diogo Antunes (born 1992) a Portuguese 100 metres sprinter ; Daniel Podence (born 1995) a footballer who plays for Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. and has almost 200 club caps ",
"Clodoaldo Silva\n Clodoaldo Silva (born 1 February 1979) is a Brazilian swimmer. He competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, winning three silver medals and one bronze. He competed again at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, where he set four world records, five Paralympic records, and won six gold medals and one silver. He also represented Brazil at the 2008, 2012 and 2016 Paralympics, and lit the Paralympic cauldron at the 2016 Summer Paralympics opening ceremony. In 2005, he was given the Best Male Athlete award by the International Paralympic Committee, the Best Female Athlete award going to Japan's Mayumi Narita. Silva has cerebral palsy, and took up swimming in 1996 as part of his rehabilitation. He is married and has a daughter Anita. At the 2016 Summer Paralympics he took a silver medal in the Mixed 4x50m Freestyle Relay. His teammates were Daniel Dias, Edenia Garcia, Susana Ribeiro, Talisson Glock, Maiara Regina Perreira Barreto, Joana Maria Silva and Patricia Pereira dos Santos. Silva was also the final torchbearer and lit the cauldron during the opening ceremony.",
"Pepe Gonçalves\n Raised in Piraju, da Silva got interested in canoeing after seeing the Brazilian team that would participate in the 2004 Summer Olympics practice in his city. He joined a social project that taught the sport in the Paranapanema River, and got moved to sailing for a year due to his low stature, but his abilities in the kayak soon convinced his teachers. Once moved from sprint to slalom, Gonçalves won his first Brazilian championship in 2011, nearly qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics - missing the qualifying time by 0.13 seconds - and got a silver medal at the 2015 Pan American Games.",
"Diogo Pereira (volleyball)\n Diogo Pereira (born June 21, 1997) is a Portuguese male volleyball player. He is part of the Portugal men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for VC Viana.",
"Víctor Diogo\n Víctor Hugo Diogo Silva (born April 9, 1958 in Treinta y Tres) is a retired football defender from Uruguay. He played in 33 games for the Uruguay national football team, scoring one goal. Diogo played club football for Peñarol in Uruguay. He made his international debut on September 20, 1979 in a Copa América match against Paraguay (0-0) in Asunción. Diogo was a member of the team that competed at the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. Between 1986 and 1989 he played for Palmeiras of Brazil."
] |
What sport does Christos Koutsospyros play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Christos Koutsospyros | 3,734,278 | 93 | [
{
"id": "7244162",
"title": "Christos Koutsospyros",
"text": " Born in Agrinio, Koutsospyros began his playing career with local team Panetolikos.",
"score": "2.0997663"
},
{
"id": "7244161",
"title": "Christos Koutsospyros",
"text": " Christos Koutsospyros (Χρήστος Κουτσοσπύρος; born 14 October 1981) is a Greek footballer. He currently plays for A.E. Ermionida F.C..",
"score": "1.9053633"
},
{
"id": "29508270",
"title": "Christos Routsis",
"text": " Christos Routsis (Χρήστος Ρούτσης, born 26 October 1985) is a professional Greek football player, currently playing as a midfielder for Agrotikos Asteras in the Gamma Ethniki.",
"score": "1.778166"
},
{
"id": "11732970",
"title": "Christos Kostis",
"text": " Christos Kostis (Χρήστος Κωστής, born 15 January 1972) is a Greek former professional footballer who played as a second striker. Kostis is widely regarded to be one of the most technical players Greece has ever produced.",
"score": "1.6961081"
},
{
"id": "7633345",
"title": "Christos Kollias",
"text": " Christos Kollias (born December 13, 1986 in Amaroussion, Greece) is a Greek basketball player. He is 1.90m (6 ft 2+ in) tall and plays the shooting guard position. He currently plays for Papagou B.C.",
"score": "1.6796851"
},
{
"id": "16268352",
"title": "Christos Koukolis",
"text": " Christos Koukolis (Χρήστος Κουκόλης; born 26 April 1990) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Super League 2 club Panserraikos.",
"score": "1.6693909"
},
{
"id": "2652195",
"title": "Christos Afroudakis",
"text": " Christos Afroudakis (born 23 May 1984) is a Greek water polo player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics, the 2008 Summer Olympics, and the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was the captain of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. His brother Georgios also competed for Greece at the Olympic level in water polo. Afroudakis retired from the Greek Men's National Team after the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.6602916"
},
{
"id": "1661928",
"title": "Christos Tasoulis",
"text": " Born in Tripoli, Tasoulis began his football career with local side Asteras Tripolis, youth teams. In the summer of 2010 he transferred to Athinaikos, where he played for one season. He moved to Fostiras in 2011. In his first year in Fostiras he contributed the club's championship in the 8th Group in Delta Ethniki, which led to the renewal of his contract for another year. Continuing his excellent performances with the club in Gamma Ethniki, signed a new two-year contract as a personal choice of the coach of the club Jacky Mathijssen. During the 2013–14 season he made the best year with the club, while scoring the winning goal in the delays of the last game that led the club to the playoffs for the rise in the Superleague Greece.",
"score": "1.6536748"
},
{
"id": "11899762",
"title": "Christos Saloustros",
"text": " Christos \"Chris\" Saloustros (Greek: Χρήστος Σαλούστρος; born March 29, 1990) is a Greek professional basketball player and the team captain for Peristeri of the Greek Basket League. He is a 2.02 m (6 ft 7 1⁄2 in) tall swingman, who can occasionally also help at the power forward position.",
"score": "1.6529624"
},
{
"id": "14079284",
"title": "Christos Arianoutsos",
"text": " At the age of 15 Christos Arianoutsos was discovered by Olympiacos scouters and he was signed by the club where he spent 3 years. He started his professional career in 2011 when he was signed by his former youth manager Alekos Alexandris to play for PO Elassona in the Greek Delta Ethniki. The next two seasons found him play for Pannaxiakos in Football League 2. After 2 full seasons in Naxos he made a bigger step in his career signing for Kallithea to play in the Football League.",
"score": "1.6526141"
},
{
"id": "7633346",
"title": "Christos Kollias",
"text": " He has played for the youth team of Panathinaikos Athens. In 2004 he transferred to Pagrati BC and played there for 3 years. In 2007-2008 he played for Halkida BC. He has also played for AS Ionikos Neas Filadelfeias BC 2008-2009.",
"score": "1.6524093"
},
{
"id": "27782598",
"title": "Christos Karipidis",
"text": " Karipidis was a part of the Greek squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics, but he didn't play any single match in the competition. Following Karipidis' good start to the 2008-09 season former Hearts player and current technical director of the Hellenic Football Federation Takis Fyssas announced that he was in the plans of the Greek national team.",
"score": "1.6398612"
},
{
"id": "31967731",
"title": "Christos Bourbos",
"text": " He played in PAS Giannina for three seasons (2001–2004) playing as a striker. He made his first 7 appearances with the club in the 2001/02 season as a rising star, helping the club to be promoted in the Greek Super League. But the next year 2002/03 did not be among the first priorities of the coach, the club is relegated and started to play the year after (2003/04 season) when the club is playing in Football League making 24 appearances. During these 3 periods he scored only two goals but he made 17 assists, being the first for his club.",
"score": "1.6374199"
},
{
"id": "27506258",
"title": "Christos Kountouriotis",
"text": " Christos Kountouriotis (Χρήστος Κουντουριώτης, born 2 January 1998) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a winger for Super League 2 club Olympiacos Volos.",
"score": "1.6316955"
},
{
"id": "27029475",
"title": "Christodoulos Kolomvos",
"text": " Christodoulos Kolomvos (born 26 October 1988) is a water polo player of Greece. He was part of the Greek team winning the bronze medal at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships. He was a member of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. He plays for Greek powerhouse Olympiacos.",
"score": "1.6310618"
},
{
"id": "11812150",
"title": "Christos Christodoulou",
"text": " After playing with the youth teams of Dafni, Christodoulou played at the senior level with Panionios, with whom he won the Greek Cup title in 1991. In 1994, he moved to Sporting.",
"score": "1.622385"
},
{
"id": "25037497",
"title": "Christos Kryparakos",
"text": " Christos Kryparakos (Χρήστος Κρυπαράκος; born 12 June 2003) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Super League 2 club Panathinaikos B.",
"score": "1.6188126"
},
{
"id": "14079283",
"title": "Christos Arianoutsos",
"text": " Christos Arinoutsos (Χρήστος Αριανούτσος, born 25 May 1993) is a Greek footballer who plays for A.E. Parou as a midfielder.",
"score": "1.6187489"
},
{
"id": "10911412",
"title": "Christos Chrysofakis",
"text": " Christos Chrysofakis (Χρήστος Χρυσοφάκης, born 18 January 1990) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Super League 2 club Ierapetra.",
"score": "1.6021261"
},
{
"id": "26481730",
"title": "George Carnoutsos",
"text": " George Carnoutsos (born 12 February 1958) is a former field hockey player from New Zealand, who was a member of the national team that finished seventh at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. He was born in Christchurch. He currently plays tennis at the Cashmere Tennis Club.",
"score": "1.6008422"
}
] | [
"Christos Koutsospyros\n Born in Agrinio, Koutsospyros began his playing career with local team Panetolikos.",
"Christos Koutsospyros\n Christos Koutsospyros (Χρήστος Κουτσοσπύρος; born 14 October 1981) is a Greek footballer. He currently plays for A.E. Ermionida F.C..",
"Christos Routsis\n Christos Routsis (Χρήστος Ρούτσης, born 26 October 1985) is a professional Greek football player, currently playing as a midfielder for Agrotikos Asteras in the Gamma Ethniki.",
"Christos Kostis\n Christos Kostis (Χρήστος Κωστής, born 15 January 1972) is a Greek former professional footballer who played as a second striker. Kostis is widely regarded to be one of the most technical players Greece has ever produced.",
"Christos Kollias\n Christos Kollias (born December 13, 1986 in Amaroussion, Greece) is a Greek basketball player. He is 1.90m (6 ft 2+ in) tall and plays the shooting guard position. He currently plays for Papagou B.C.",
"Christos Koukolis\n Christos Koukolis (Χρήστος Κουκόλης; born 26 April 1990) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Super League 2 club Panserraikos.",
"Christos Afroudakis\n Christos Afroudakis (born 23 May 1984) is a Greek water polo player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics, the 2008 Summer Olympics, and the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was the captain of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. His brother Georgios also competed for Greece at the Olympic level in water polo. Afroudakis retired from the Greek Men's National Team after the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"Christos Tasoulis\n Born in Tripoli, Tasoulis began his football career with local side Asteras Tripolis, youth teams. In the summer of 2010 he transferred to Athinaikos, where he played for one season. He moved to Fostiras in 2011. In his first year in Fostiras he contributed the club's championship in the 8th Group in Delta Ethniki, which led to the renewal of his contract for another year. Continuing his excellent performances with the club in Gamma Ethniki, signed a new two-year contract as a personal choice of the coach of the club Jacky Mathijssen. During the 2013–14 season he made the best year with the club, while scoring the winning goal in the delays of the last game that led the club to the playoffs for the rise in the Superleague Greece.",
"Christos Saloustros\n Christos \"Chris\" Saloustros (Greek: Χρήστος Σαλούστρος; born March 29, 1990) is a Greek professional basketball player and the team captain for Peristeri of the Greek Basket League. He is a 2.02 m (6 ft 7 1⁄2 in) tall swingman, who can occasionally also help at the power forward position.",
"Christos Arianoutsos\n At the age of 15 Christos Arianoutsos was discovered by Olympiacos scouters and he was signed by the club where he spent 3 years. He started his professional career in 2011 when he was signed by his former youth manager Alekos Alexandris to play for PO Elassona in the Greek Delta Ethniki. The next two seasons found him play for Pannaxiakos in Football League 2. After 2 full seasons in Naxos he made a bigger step in his career signing for Kallithea to play in the Football League.",
"Christos Kollias\n He has played for the youth team of Panathinaikos Athens. In 2004 he transferred to Pagrati BC and played there for 3 years. In 2007-2008 he played for Halkida BC. He has also played for AS Ionikos Neas Filadelfeias BC 2008-2009.",
"Christos Karipidis\n Karipidis was a part of the Greek squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics, but he didn't play any single match in the competition. Following Karipidis' good start to the 2008-09 season former Hearts player and current technical director of the Hellenic Football Federation Takis Fyssas announced that he was in the plans of the Greek national team.",
"Christos Bourbos\n He played in PAS Giannina for three seasons (2001–2004) playing as a striker. He made his first 7 appearances with the club in the 2001/02 season as a rising star, helping the club to be promoted in the Greek Super League. But the next year 2002/03 did not be among the first priorities of the coach, the club is relegated and started to play the year after (2003/04 season) when the club is playing in Football League making 24 appearances. During these 3 periods he scored only two goals but he made 17 assists, being the first for his club.",
"Christos Kountouriotis\n Christos Kountouriotis (Χρήστος Κουντουριώτης, born 2 January 1998) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a winger for Super League 2 club Olympiacos Volos.",
"Christodoulos Kolomvos\n Christodoulos Kolomvos (born 26 October 1988) is a water polo player of Greece. He was part of the Greek team winning the bronze medal at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships. He was a member of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. He plays for Greek powerhouse Olympiacos.",
"Christos Christodoulou\n After playing with the youth teams of Dafni, Christodoulou played at the senior level with Panionios, with whom he won the Greek Cup title in 1991. In 1994, he moved to Sporting.",
"Christos Kryparakos\n Christos Kryparakos (Χρήστος Κρυπαράκος; born 12 June 2003) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Super League 2 club Panathinaikos B.",
"Christos Arianoutsos\n Christos Arinoutsos (Χρήστος Αριανούτσος, born 25 May 1993) is a Greek footballer who plays for A.E. Parou as a midfielder.",
"Christos Chrysofakis\n Christos Chrysofakis (Χρήστος Χρυσοφάκης, born 18 January 1990) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Super League 2 club Ierapetra.",
"George Carnoutsos\n George Carnoutsos (born 12 February 1958) is a former field hockey player from New Zealand, who was a member of the national team that finished seventh at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. He was born in Christchurch. He currently plays tennis at the Cashmere Tennis Club."
] |
What sport does Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ademar Xavier | 3,227,629 | 67 | [
{
"id": "10926856",
"title": "Ademar Xavier",
"text": " Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior (born 8 January 1985 in Arapongas), commonly known as Ademar Xavier, Xavier Ademar or simply Ademar, is a Brazilian footballer.",
"score": "2.0203874"
},
{
"id": "10926857",
"title": "Ademar Xavier",
"text": " He started his career in 2001 as a junior for Londrina F.C. in Brazil. He was quickly selected to play for Brazil under 16's in 2001, in an international championship in France. Ademar also played for Vitória F.C. (Portugal) and Bulgarian Vihren Sandanski between 2005-2007. From 2008-2009 played for Rio Ave (Portugal), C.S. Buftea (Romania) and Gloria Buzău (Romania). Joined Xinabajul in September 2009. Between 2010 and 2013 he played at Moldovan side FC Milsami Orhei. Since 27 February 2014 he plays at FC Zimbru Chișinău.",
"score": "1.8327883"
},
{
"id": "10926858",
"title": "Ademar Xavier",
"text": " Played for Brazil in 2001 at the age of 16.",
"score": "1.7851189"
},
{
"id": "10926859",
"title": "Ademar Xavier",
"text": " Ademar is the cousin of fellow footballer Juninho.",
"score": "1.7496595"
},
{
"id": "26541904",
"title": "Aparecido",
"text": "Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior, commonly known as Ademar, Brazilian footballer ; César Aparecido Rodrigues, commonly known as César, Brazilian footballer born 1974 ; Gilberto Aparecido da Silva, commonly known as Gilberto Silva, Brazilian footballer born 1976 ; Johnathan Aparecido da Silva, commonly known as Johnathan, Brazilian footballer born 1990 ; Wilson Aparecido Xavier Júnior, commonly known as Juninho, Brazilian footballer born 1984 ; Leonardo José Aparecido Moura, commonly known as Leonardo, Brazilian footballer born 1986 ; Ronaldo Aparecido Rodrigues, commonly known as Naldo, Brazilian footballer born 1982 ; Pedro Aparecido Santana, commonly known as Pedrinho, Brazilian footballer ; Rodrigo Thiago Aparecido da Silva ; As given name ; Aparecido Francisco de Lima, commonly known as Lima, Brazilian footballer born 1981 ; Aparecido Donizetti, Brazilian footballer Aparecido is a Brazilian surname, may refer to:",
"score": "1.67923"
},
{
"id": "4977733",
"title": "Arapongas",
"text": "Luciano Pagliarini – Brazilian cyclist. ; Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior – Brazilian footballer. ; Wilson Aparecido Xavier Júnior – Brazilian footballer. ",
"score": "1.590081"
},
{
"id": "11273421",
"title": "Ademar (footballer)",
"text": " Ademar formerly played for BC Augsburg and Botafogo. He was loaned to Estácio in 2007.",
"score": "1.4969164"
},
{
"id": "29728837",
"title": "Bruno Xavier",
"text": " Xavier is married to Mariângela Antunes who also plays beach soccer having been introduced to the sport through her husband; the couple wed in March 2009 and have two children, Luna and Cauã. In his home state of Espírito Santo, in Anchieta, Xavier has set up and owns the \"Mission Training Center\" which he established in order to \"integrate young people into society through sport\" as well as develop the next generation of Brazilian beach soccer players. The centre also has a focus on developing women's beach soccer. The centre has proved successful in nurturing players such as Gean Pietro and Raphael Silva who have gone on to represent the Brazilian national under-20 beach soccer team in winning the 2017 South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship. Junior Negao and Juninho are his idols.",
"score": "1.4805169"
},
{
"id": "4405476",
"title": "António Xavier",
"text": " António Manuel Pereira Xavier (born 6 July 1992) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for G.D. Estoril Praia on loan from Greek club Panathinaikos F.C. as a winger. He achieved Primeira Liga totals of over 150 games for Marítimo, Paços de Ferreira, Tondela and Estoril.",
"score": "1.447878"
},
{
"id": "31061243",
"title": "Valmir Aparecido Franci",
"text": " Valmir Aparecido Franci de Campos Júnior (born April 16, 1990 in Capivari), known as Francis, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Vila Nova as forward.",
"score": "1.4343824"
},
{
"id": "1853714",
"title": "Xavier Ipharraguerre",
"text": " Xavier Ipharraguerre (born 3 September 1975) is a French former professional footballer who played as a forward. He played in Division 2 for Niort.",
"score": "1.4302127"
},
{
"id": "14609989",
"title": "Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior",
"text": " Braga started his career at hometown club Flamengo, one of the most successful Brazilian team. He played his only match (exclude State competition) at 1997 Copa do Brasil. He then played for Americano. In 2002, he was signed by Centro de Futebol Zico Sociedade Esportiva, the club found by Brazilian legend Zico, re-joined former teammate Felipe Veras. Both player left the club in late 2002, which Braga joined Hungarian top division team Békéscsabai Előre. He then returned to Brazil. In June 2005, he left for Petróleos Luanda of Portuguese speaking country Angola, from less famous team Internacional of Limeira, São Paulo state. In March 2006, he returned to Rio de Janeiro for Estácio de Sá. He then signed a contract in August with Cachoeiras of Cachoeiras de Macacu, Rio de Janeiro state. After he played for Castelo Branco of Rio de Janeiro city at 2008 season, he retired.",
"score": "1.4267802"
},
{
"id": "28623446",
"title": "Adryan",
"text": " training with the professional team as he was selected to play with the Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 South American Under-17 Football Championship, being champion. A few months later he was again selected to play in the Brazil U-17 team, but this at a higher level in the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup. During the competition he was linked with Manchester United. On 1 July 2012, Adryan played his first game for the Brazilian Série A, against Atlético Goianiense, and he scored in the 3–2 Flamengo victory. On 16 September 2012, he scored a freekick at the age of 16 for the Flamengo first team to help earn Flamengo a draw against Grêmio.",
"score": "1.4240699"
},
{
"id": "11273420",
"title": "Ademar (footballer)",
"text": " Ademar dos Santos Batista (born 21 March 1983), known simply as Ademar, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker.",
"score": "1.4134521"
},
{
"id": "24898070",
"title": "Xavier (footballer, born January 1980)",
"text": "Bahia State League: 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 ; Brazilian North Cup: 1997, 1999 ; Tournament Rio — São Paulo: 2005 ; Brazilian League: 2005 ; Toto Cup: 2007 ",
"score": "1.4106467"
},
{
"id": "614295",
"title": "Ana Luísa Aparecida",
"text": " Ana Luísa Aparecida de Souza Soares (born 28 March 2001 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian Paralympic volleyball player. She competed at the 2020 Summer Paralympics, in sitting volleyball, winning a bronze medal as a member of the Brazilian team. When she was fourteen years old she fractured her femur bone in her right leg due to a motorcycle accident, and that resulted in reduced movement in the limb.",
"score": "1.4099457"
},
{
"id": "28623452",
"title": "Adryan",
"text": " Adryan was a key player for Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 South American Under-17 Football Championship victorious campaign. He played eight matches and scored three goals in the tournament and finished as champion. The young player has been called up by coach Émerson Ávila alongside Lucas Piazón as the biggest stars of Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup. On 23 June 2011, Adryan scored the winning goal against Australia U-17 with a fine free-kick. On 26 June 2011, he scored the equaliser in the 90th minute to level Brazil U-17 with Ivory Coast U-17. In 2012, Adryan was called up to the Brazil U-20 where he impressed, this time in the Mediterranean International Cup, where the Brazil team were eliminated in the semi-final, but Adryan was named Mediterranean International Cup Player of the tournament.",
"score": "1.4030724"
},
{
"id": "1866743",
"title": "Semaj Christon",
"text": " Christon joined Xavier for the 2012–13 season. After missing the first game of the season due to a cut in his elbow getting infected, he made his Musketeer debut against Butler on 13 November 2012, contributing 2 points and 8 assists. His game soon picked up as he had an average of 17.7 points and 5 assists over the next 7 games, finishing the season as Xavier's leader in points (15.2), assists (4.6), steals (1.5) and minutes (34.3), with his 456 total points ranking second among Xavier freshmen through history. His performances earned him personal recognition, he was Rookie of the Year, All-Rookie team and All-Conference Second Team in the Atlantic 10, adding a Kyle Macy Freshmen All-America Team selection by Collegeinsider.com and NABC District 4 Second Team.",
"score": "1.4013603"
},
{
"id": "14609988",
"title": "Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior",
"text": " Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior (born 12 August 1976) is a former Brazilian footballer.",
"score": "1.3977158"
},
{
"id": "29437227",
"title": "Xavier College",
"text": " captain. He broke the APS runs (1642) and wickets (139) records which remain unbroken, and captained Xavier to back-to-back premierships in 1923–24. Due to the performances of David Seal in 1974 the school won the premiership once again after fifty years. Cricket alongside rowing (colloquially known as XCBC) are the two biggest summer sports at the college. The school's Australian rules football team has produced numerous VFL/AFL players, and has won thirty football premierships, third of the APS schools behind Scotch (36) and Melbourne Grammar (35). The Old Xaverians Football Club has also been successful in the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA), winning eight premierships in the last decade. Along with football, the school's Old Xaverian community also links with the Old Xaverians Soccer Club and Old Xaverians Athletics Club.",
"score": "1.396558"
}
] | [
"Ademar Xavier\n Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior (born 8 January 1985 in Arapongas), commonly known as Ademar Xavier, Xavier Ademar or simply Ademar, is a Brazilian footballer.",
"Ademar Xavier\n He started his career in 2001 as a junior for Londrina F.C. in Brazil. He was quickly selected to play for Brazil under 16's in 2001, in an international championship in France. Ademar also played for Vitória F.C. (Portugal) and Bulgarian Vihren Sandanski between 2005-2007. From 2008-2009 played for Rio Ave (Portugal), C.S. Buftea (Romania) and Gloria Buzău (Romania). Joined Xinabajul in September 2009. Between 2010 and 2013 he played at Moldovan side FC Milsami Orhei. Since 27 February 2014 he plays at FC Zimbru Chișinău.",
"Ademar Xavier\n Played for Brazil in 2001 at the age of 16.",
"Ademar Xavier\n Ademar is the cousin of fellow footballer Juninho.",
"Aparecido\nAdemar Aparecido Xavier Júnior, commonly known as Ademar, Brazilian footballer ; César Aparecido Rodrigues, commonly known as César, Brazilian footballer born 1974 ; Gilberto Aparecido da Silva, commonly known as Gilberto Silva, Brazilian footballer born 1976 ; Johnathan Aparecido da Silva, commonly known as Johnathan, Brazilian footballer born 1990 ; Wilson Aparecido Xavier Júnior, commonly known as Juninho, Brazilian footballer born 1984 ; Leonardo José Aparecido Moura, commonly known as Leonardo, Brazilian footballer born 1986 ; Ronaldo Aparecido Rodrigues, commonly known as Naldo, Brazilian footballer born 1982 ; Pedro Aparecido Santana, commonly known as Pedrinho, Brazilian footballer ; Rodrigo Thiago Aparecido da Silva ; As given name ; Aparecido Francisco de Lima, commonly known as Lima, Brazilian footballer born 1981 ; Aparecido Donizetti, Brazilian footballer Aparecido is a Brazilian surname, may refer to:",
"Arapongas\nLuciano Pagliarini – Brazilian cyclist. ; Ademar Aparecido Xavier Júnior – Brazilian footballer. ; Wilson Aparecido Xavier Júnior – Brazilian footballer. ",
"Ademar (footballer)\n Ademar formerly played for BC Augsburg and Botafogo. He was loaned to Estácio in 2007.",
"Bruno Xavier\n Xavier is married to Mariângela Antunes who also plays beach soccer having been introduced to the sport through her husband; the couple wed in March 2009 and have two children, Luna and Cauã. In his home state of Espírito Santo, in Anchieta, Xavier has set up and owns the \"Mission Training Center\" which he established in order to \"integrate young people into society through sport\" as well as develop the next generation of Brazilian beach soccer players. The centre also has a focus on developing women's beach soccer. The centre has proved successful in nurturing players such as Gean Pietro and Raphael Silva who have gone on to represent the Brazilian national under-20 beach soccer team in winning the 2017 South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship. Junior Negao and Juninho are his idols.",
"António Xavier\n António Manuel Pereira Xavier (born 6 July 1992) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for G.D. Estoril Praia on loan from Greek club Panathinaikos F.C. as a winger. He achieved Primeira Liga totals of over 150 games for Marítimo, Paços de Ferreira, Tondela and Estoril.",
"Valmir Aparecido Franci\n Valmir Aparecido Franci de Campos Júnior (born April 16, 1990 in Capivari), known as Francis, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Vila Nova as forward.",
"Xavier Ipharraguerre\n Xavier Ipharraguerre (born 3 September 1975) is a French former professional footballer who played as a forward. He played in Division 2 for Niort.",
"Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior\n Braga started his career at hometown club Flamengo, one of the most successful Brazilian team. He played his only match (exclude State competition) at 1997 Copa do Brasil. He then played for Americano. In 2002, he was signed by Centro de Futebol Zico Sociedade Esportiva, the club found by Brazilian legend Zico, re-joined former teammate Felipe Veras. Both player left the club in late 2002, which Braga joined Hungarian top division team Békéscsabai Előre. He then returned to Brazil. In June 2005, he left for Petróleos Luanda of Portuguese speaking country Angola, from less famous team Internacional of Limeira, São Paulo state. In March 2006, he returned to Rio de Janeiro for Estácio de Sá. He then signed a contract in August with Cachoeiras of Cachoeiras de Macacu, Rio de Janeiro state. After he played for Castelo Branco of Rio de Janeiro city at 2008 season, he retired.",
"Adryan\n training with the professional team as he was selected to play with the Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 South American Under-17 Football Championship, being champion. A few months later he was again selected to play in the Brazil U-17 team, but this at a higher level in the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup. During the competition he was linked with Manchester United. On 1 July 2012, Adryan played his first game for the Brazilian Série A, against Atlético Goianiense, and he scored in the 3–2 Flamengo victory. On 16 September 2012, he scored a freekick at the age of 16 for the Flamengo first team to help earn Flamengo a draw against Grêmio.",
"Ademar (footballer)\n Ademar dos Santos Batista (born 21 March 1983), known simply as Ademar, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker.",
"Xavier (footballer, born January 1980)\nBahia State League: 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 ; Brazilian North Cup: 1997, 1999 ; Tournament Rio — São Paulo: 2005 ; Brazilian League: 2005 ; Toto Cup: 2007 ",
"Ana Luísa Aparecida\n Ana Luísa Aparecida de Souza Soares (born 28 March 2001 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian Paralympic volleyball player. She competed at the 2020 Summer Paralympics, in sitting volleyball, winning a bronze medal as a member of the Brazilian team. When she was fourteen years old she fractured her femur bone in her right leg due to a motorcycle accident, and that resulted in reduced movement in the limb.",
"Adryan\n Adryan was a key player for Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 South American Under-17 Football Championship victorious campaign. He played eight matches and scored three goals in the tournament and finished as champion. The young player has been called up by coach Émerson Ávila alongside Lucas Piazón as the biggest stars of Brazil U-17 team in the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup. On 23 June 2011, Adryan scored the winning goal against Australia U-17 with a fine free-kick. On 26 June 2011, he scored the equaliser in the 90th minute to level Brazil U-17 with Ivory Coast U-17. In 2012, Adryan was called up to the Brazil U-20 where he impressed, this time in the Mediterranean International Cup, where the Brazil team were eliminated in the semi-final, but Adryan was named Mediterranean International Cup Player of the tournament.",
"Semaj Christon\n Christon joined Xavier for the 2012–13 season. After missing the first game of the season due to a cut in his elbow getting infected, he made his Musketeer debut against Butler on 13 November 2012, contributing 2 points and 8 assists. His game soon picked up as he had an average of 17.7 points and 5 assists over the next 7 games, finishing the season as Xavier's leader in points (15.2), assists (4.6), steals (1.5) and minutes (34.3), with his 456 total points ranking second among Xavier freshmen through history. His performances earned him personal recognition, he was Rookie of the Year, All-Rookie team and All-Conference Second Team in the Atlantic 10, adding a Kyle Macy Freshmen All-America Team selection by Collegeinsider.com and NABC District 4 Second Team.",
"Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior\n Ademar da Silva Braga Júnior (born 12 August 1976) is a former Brazilian footballer.",
"Xavier College\n captain. He broke the APS runs (1642) and wickets (139) records which remain unbroken, and captained Xavier to back-to-back premierships in 1923–24. Due to the performances of David Seal in 1974 the school won the premiership once again after fifty years. Cricket alongside rowing (colloquially known as XCBC) are the two biggest summer sports at the college. The school's Australian rules football team has produced numerous VFL/AFL players, and has won thirty football premierships, third of the APS schools behind Scotch (36) and Melbourne Grammar (35). The Old Xaverians Football Club has also been successful in the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA), winning eight premierships in the last decade. Along with football, the school's Old Xaverian community also links with the Old Xaverians Soccer Club and Old Xaverians Athletics Club."
] |
What sport does George Douglas play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | George Douglas (footballer) | 4,211,857 | 54 | [
{
"id": "12580590",
"title": "George Douglas (footballer)",
"text": " George Harold Douglas (18 August 1893 – 1979) was an English professional association footballer who played as a winger. He played over 300 matches and scored 23 goals in the Football League. He moved into non-league football in 1928 as player/manager of Tunbridge Wells Rangers until 1930, when he moved to Dover Athletic.",
"score": "1.6864313"
},
{
"id": "15684210",
"title": "George Douglas (golfer)",
"text": " George Douglas (born c. 1869) was a Scottish professional golfer. Douglas tied for third place in the 1896 U.S. Open, held 18 July 1896 at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, New York.",
"score": "1.6381376"
},
{
"id": "30564086",
"title": "John Douglas (sportsman)",
"text": " John Raymond Douglas (born 24 October 1951 in Brunswick East) is a former Australian sportsman who played Australian rules football in the Victorian Football League (VFL) with North Melbourne during the 1970s and first-class cricket for Victoria. From the Coburg Amateurs originally, Douglas made his VFL debut in the opening round of the 1972 season against St Kilda, whose Brownlow Medal rover Ross Smith was celebrating his 200th game. He played six further games that year and did not appear again until 1975, when North Melbourne won their inaugural premiership with Douglas taking the field three times during the home and away season. He finished his football career after playing just two games in 1976, to finish with 12 games and eight goals for North Melbourne. A right-arm fast-medium pace ",
"score": "1.6375442"
},
{
"id": "15865182",
"title": "Douglas Chiarotti",
"text": " Douglas Chiarotti (born November 10, 1970), known as Douglas, is a Brazilian former volleyball player who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics and in the 2000 Summer Olympics. He was born in Santo André, São Paulo, Brazil. In 1992 he was part of the Brazilian team which won the gold medal in the Olympic tournament. He played six matches. Eight years later he finished sixth with the Brazilian team in the 2000 Olympic tournament. He played all eight matches.",
"score": "1.609273"
},
{
"id": "15684211",
"title": "George Douglas (golfer)",
"text": " Douglas was born in Scotland, circa 1869.",
"score": "1.6047587"
},
{
"id": "1703967",
"title": "Jack Douglas (ice hockey)",
"text": " John Douglas (April 24, 1930 – January 12, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey defenceman who competed in the 1960 Winter Olympics. He was born in Trenton, Ontario. Throughout his hockey career, he was known for his \"six inch slapper\", where he would make a powerful slapshot by moving his stick only six inches. Douglas won the silver medal at the 1960 Winter Olympics in ice hockey. He played for Indianapolis Chiefs, Chatham Maroons and Pittsburgh Hornets. Douglas played 1 match in the American Hockey League and 119 matches in the International Hockey League.",
"score": "1.5953273"
},
{
"id": "13021292",
"title": "Dewayne Douglas",
"text": " Edward Dewayne Douglas (December 22, 1931 – April 11, 2000) was an American football offensive tackle who played one season with the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the New York Giants in the fourth round of the 1953 NFL Draft. He played college football for the University of Florida and attended Kissimmee High School in Kissimmee, Florida.",
"score": "1.5939361"
},
{
"id": "3866812",
"title": "Douglas Simpson",
"text": " Douglas Simpson (born 15 May 1982 in Glasgow) is a field hockey player from Scotland. Simpson started his career at Stepps HC before moving to Western Wildcats in 2002. Simpson enjoyed a free-scoring partnership with Scott McCartney for some years. His predatory skills are also shown off to great effect indoors, where he has also picked up caps. A career highlight was selection for the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, along with teammates Dunlop, David Mansouri and Graham Moodie.",
"score": "1.5918884"
},
{
"id": "544704",
"title": "Merrill Douglas",
"text": " Merrill George Douglas (born March 15, 1936 in Salt Lake City, Utah) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Chicago Bears, Dallas Cowboys, and Philadelphia Eagles. He played college football at the University of Utah.",
"score": "1.5911878"
},
{
"id": "15552709",
"title": "Robert Douglas (American football)",
"text": " Robert Edward Douglas II (born July 25, 1982) is a former American football fullback who played for the New York Giants in the National Football League. He played college football at the University of Memphis.",
"score": "1.5911567"
},
{
"id": "1800408",
"title": "Thomas Douglas-Powell",
"text": " Thomas Ewen Douglas-Powell (born 16 September 1992) is an Australian volleyball player. Tom first started playing volleyball at Brisbane Grammar School in 2005. In 2009 Tom accepted a scholarship at the Queensland Academy of Sport, and this led to his first Australian National Junior Team selection later that year. He was first invited to trial for the Volleyroos in 2013, and was selected to compete at the world FISU Games in Russia. After this, he was selected to be a part of the Volleyroos and was part of the team that qualified for the 2014 World Championships, and also competed at the Asian Championships in Dubai. He is currently playing with the University of Winnipeg, Canada. He is the brother of actress Emma Ishta.",
"score": "1.5885595"
},
{
"id": "2415863",
"title": "A. H. Douglas",
"text": " Douglas then played for the Navy Midshipmen from 1904 to 1907, a teammate of Bill Dague.",
"score": "1.5853951"
},
{
"id": "1262006",
"title": "Jon Douglas",
"text": " He attended Stanford University, where he was Stanford's first All-American in tennis in 1957, and earned the honor again in 1958, when he was runner-up in both singles and doubles competition at the NCAA Men's Tennis Championship. Douglas was also a quarterback on Stanford's football team. He played backup to John Brodie for two years, and when Brodie graduated, became the starter for the 1957 season, leading the team to a 6–4 record. In 1996, he was inducted into the Intercollegiate Tennis Hall of Fame in Athens, Georgia.",
"score": "1.5845246"
},
{
"id": "13745947",
"title": "Luke Douglas",
"text": " Luke Archibald Douglas (born 12 May 1986) is an Australian-born Scotland international former rugby league footballer who played as a. Douglas played for the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks and the Gold Coast Titans in the NRL from 2006 to 2016. He also played for St Helens in the Super League in 2017 and 2018, and on loan from the St. Helens at the Leigh Centurions in the 2019 Betfred Championship, after which he retired from the sport. Through ancestral eligibility, he represented Scotland at the 2013 World Cup, 2016 Four Nations and the 2017 World Cup.",
"score": "1.5648888"
},
{
"id": "12113650",
"title": "Bob Douglas",
"text": " Robert L. Douglas (b. (St. Kitts) November 4, 1882 – d. (unknown) July 16, 1979) was the founder of the New York Renaissance basketball team, the first fully all-black professional black-owned basketball team. Nicknamed the \"Father of Black Professional Basketball\", Douglas owned and coached the Rens from 1923 to 1949, guiding them to a 2,318-381 record (.859). He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor in 1972, the first African American enshrined. The Rens barnstormed throughout the United States, mostly in the Midwest, and played any team that would schedule them, black or white. Traveling as far as 200 miles for ",
"score": "1.5646597"
},
{
"id": "30340887",
"title": "Billy Douglas (rugby union)",
"text": " Douglas played club rugby for Canton RFC and Cardiff RFC, and in the 1885–86 season he succeeded Frank Hancock as the senior club captain. Douglas was first selected to play for the Welsh national team as part of the 1886 Home Nations Championship in the opening game against England. The team was captained by Newport's Charlie Newman and Douglas was one of three Cardiff players gaining their first cap in the game. Although Wales lost the game, the margin was low and Douglas was re-selected for the very next Welsh international, this time to Scotland. Wales lost this game, but due to a dispute with Ireland failed to complete all the matches in the tournament. In the next year's tournament Douglas was selected for the first two games. The first was a drawn game against England at Llanelli, the country's best result to ",
"score": "1.5631378"
},
{
"id": "15834780",
"title": "Rab Douglas",
"text": " Robert James Douglas (born 24 April 1972) is a Scottish former professional footballer and current coach for Arbroath who played as a goalkeeper. He played for several clubs, including Livingston, Dundee, Celtic, Leicester City and Forfar Athletic. Douglas was part of the Celtic side that reached the 2003 UEFA Cup Final, under the management of Martin O'Neill. He also represented Scotland at international level, playing 19 times between 2002 and 2005. In 2017, Douglas was inducted into the Dundee FC Hall of Fame.",
"score": "1.5551279"
},
{
"id": "15684213",
"title": "George Douglas (golfer)",
"text": " Douglas's date of death is unknown.",
"score": "1.5526658"
},
{
"id": "9482392",
"title": "Douglas McWhirter",
"text": " Douglas S. McWhirter (13 August 1886 – 14 October 1966) was an English amateur footballer who competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics. McWhirter, born in Erith, Kent, was part of the English team, which won the gold medal in the football tournament. He played one match.",
"score": "1.5524659"
},
{
"id": "11329835",
"title": "Harry Douglas",
"text": " Douglas attended Jonesboro High School. Douglas was a basketball star in high school, averaging 20.5 points, 3 rebounds, 4.5 assists, and 3 steals as a senior. On the gridiron, he was also exceptional, accumulating 80 catches for 1,539 yards and 14 touchdowns over his 3-year career. He was rated 3-stars by Rivals.com and accepted a scholarship to Louisville in 2003, picking the Cardinals over Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Missouri. He is the brother of Toney Douglas, who last played point guard for the Memphis Grizzlies of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and currently plays for Iraklis Thessaloniki of the Greek Basket League. Harry and Toney are the sixth pair of brothers to play in the NFL and NBA, respectively.",
"score": "1.5477448"
}
] | [
"George Douglas (footballer)\n George Harold Douglas (18 August 1893 – 1979) was an English professional association footballer who played as a winger. He played over 300 matches and scored 23 goals in the Football League. He moved into non-league football in 1928 as player/manager of Tunbridge Wells Rangers until 1930, when he moved to Dover Athletic.",
"George Douglas (golfer)\n George Douglas (born c. 1869) was a Scottish professional golfer. Douglas tied for third place in the 1896 U.S. Open, held 18 July 1896 at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, New York.",
"John Douglas (sportsman)\n John Raymond Douglas (born 24 October 1951 in Brunswick East) is a former Australian sportsman who played Australian rules football in the Victorian Football League (VFL) with North Melbourne during the 1970s and first-class cricket for Victoria. From the Coburg Amateurs originally, Douglas made his VFL debut in the opening round of the 1972 season against St Kilda, whose Brownlow Medal rover Ross Smith was celebrating his 200th game. He played six further games that year and did not appear again until 1975, when North Melbourne won their inaugural premiership with Douglas taking the field three times during the home and away season. He finished his football career after playing just two games in 1976, to finish with 12 games and eight goals for North Melbourne. A right-arm fast-medium pace ",
"Douglas Chiarotti\n Douglas Chiarotti (born November 10, 1970), known as Douglas, is a Brazilian former volleyball player who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics and in the 2000 Summer Olympics. He was born in Santo André, São Paulo, Brazil. In 1992 he was part of the Brazilian team which won the gold medal in the Olympic tournament. He played six matches. Eight years later he finished sixth with the Brazilian team in the 2000 Olympic tournament. He played all eight matches.",
"George Douglas (golfer)\n Douglas was born in Scotland, circa 1869.",
"Jack Douglas (ice hockey)\n John Douglas (April 24, 1930 – January 12, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey defenceman who competed in the 1960 Winter Olympics. He was born in Trenton, Ontario. Throughout his hockey career, he was known for his \"six inch slapper\", where he would make a powerful slapshot by moving his stick only six inches. Douglas won the silver medal at the 1960 Winter Olympics in ice hockey. He played for Indianapolis Chiefs, Chatham Maroons and Pittsburgh Hornets. Douglas played 1 match in the American Hockey League and 119 matches in the International Hockey League.",
"Dewayne Douglas\n Edward Dewayne Douglas (December 22, 1931 – April 11, 2000) was an American football offensive tackle who played one season with the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the New York Giants in the fourth round of the 1953 NFL Draft. He played college football for the University of Florida and attended Kissimmee High School in Kissimmee, Florida.",
"Douglas Simpson\n Douglas Simpson (born 15 May 1982 in Glasgow) is a field hockey player from Scotland. Simpson started his career at Stepps HC before moving to Western Wildcats in 2002. Simpson enjoyed a free-scoring partnership with Scott McCartney for some years. His predatory skills are also shown off to great effect indoors, where he has also picked up caps. A career highlight was selection for the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, along with teammates Dunlop, David Mansouri and Graham Moodie.",
"Merrill Douglas\n Merrill George Douglas (born March 15, 1936 in Salt Lake City, Utah) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Chicago Bears, Dallas Cowboys, and Philadelphia Eagles. He played college football at the University of Utah.",
"Robert Douglas (American football)\n Robert Edward Douglas II (born July 25, 1982) is a former American football fullback who played for the New York Giants in the National Football League. He played college football at the University of Memphis.",
"Thomas Douglas-Powell\n Thomas Ewen Douglas-Powell (born 16 September 1992) is an Australian volleyball player. Tom first started playing volleyball at Brisbane Grammar School in 2005. In 2009 Tom accepted a scholarship at the Queensland Academy of Sport, and this led to his first Australian National Junior Team selection later that year. He was first invited to trial for the Volleyroos in 2013, and was selected to compete at the world FISU Games in Russia. After this, he was selected to be a part of the Volleyroos and was part of the team that qualified for the 2014 World Championships, and also competed at the Asian Championships in Dubai. He is currently playing with the University of Winnipeg, Canada. He is the brother of actress Emma Ishta.",
"A. H. Douglas\n Douglas then played for the Navy Midshipmen from 1904 to 1907, a teammate of Bill Dague.",
"Jon Douglas\n He attended Stanford University, where he was Stanford's first All-American in tennis in 1957, and earned the honor again in 1958, when he was runner-up in both singles and doubles competition at the NCAA Men's Tennis Championship. Douglas was also a quarterback on Stanford's football team. He played backup to John Brodie for two years, and when Brodie graduated, became the starter for the 1957 season, leading the team to a 6–4 record. In 1996, he was inducted into the Intercollegiate Tennis Hall of Fame in Athens, Georgia.",
"Luke Douglas\n Luke Archibald Douglas (born 12 May 1986) is an Australian-born Scotland international former rugby league footballer who played as a. Douglas played for the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks and the Gold Coast Titans in the NRL from 2006 to 2016. He also played for St Helens in the Super League in 2017 and 2018, and on loan from the St. Helens at the Leigh Centurions in the 2019 Betfred Championship, after which he retired from the sport. Through ancestral eligibility, he represented Scotland at the 2013 World Cup, 2016 Four Nations and the 2017 World Cup.",
"Bob Douglas\n Robert L. Douglas (b. (St. Kitts) November 4, 1882 – d. (unknown) July 16, 1979) was the founder of the New York Renaissance basketball team, the first fully all-black professional black-owned basketball team. Nicknamed the \"Father of Black Professional Basketball\", Douglas owned and coached the Rens from 1923 to 1949, guiding them to a 2,318-381 record (.859). He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor in 1972, the first African American enshrined. The Rens barnstormed throughout the United States, mostly in the Midwest, and played any team that would schedule them, black or white. Traveling as far as 200 miles for ",
"Billy Douglas (rugby union)\n Douglas played club rugby for Canton RFC and Cardiff RFC, and in the 1885–86 season he succeeded Frank Hancock as the senior club captain. Douglas was first selected to play for the Welsh national team as part of the 1886 Home Nations Championship in the opening game against England. The team was captained by Newport's Charlie Newman and Douglas was one of three Cardiff players gaining their first cap in the game. Although Wales lost the game, the margin was low and Douglas was re-selected for the very next Welsh international, this time to Scotland. Wales lost this game, but due to a dispute with Ireland failed to complete all the matches in the tournament. In the next year's tournament Douglas was selected for the first two games. The first was a drawn game against England at Llanelli, the country's best result to ",
"Rab Douglas\n Robert James Douglas (born 24 April 1972) is a Scottish former professional footballer and current coach for Arbroath who played as a goalkeeper. He played for several clubs, including Livingston, Dundee, Celtic, Leicester City and Forfar Athletic. Douglas was part of the Celtic side that reached the 2003 UEFA Cup Final, under the management of Martin O'Neill. He also represented Scotland at international level, playing 19 times between 2002 and 2005. In 2017, Douglas was inducted into the Dundee FC Hall of Fame.",
"George Douglas (golfer)\n Douglas's date of death is unknown.",
"Douglas McWhirter\n Douglas S. McWhirter (13 August 1886 – 14 October 1966) was an English amateur footballer who competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics. McWhirter, born in Erith, Kent, was part of the English team, which won the gold medal in the football tournament. He played one match.",
"Harry Douglas\n Douglas attended Jonesboro High School. Douglas was a basketball star in high school, averaging 20.5 points, 3 rebounds, 4.5 assists, and 3 steals as a senior. On the gridiron, he was also exceptional, accumulating 80 catches for 1,539 yards and 14 touchdowns over his 3-year career. He was rated 3-stars by Rivals.com and accepted a scholarship to Louisville in 2003, picking the Cardinals over Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Missouri. He is the brother of Toney Douglas, who last played point guard for the Memphis Grizzlies of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and currently plays for Iraklis Thessaloniki of the Greek Basket League. Harry and Toney are the sixth pair of brothers to play in the NFL and NBA, respectively."
] |
What sport does Ernest Street play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ernest Street | 876,189 | 51 | [
{
"id": "649784",
"title": "Gary Street",
"text": " Street played as a scrum-half for Aston Old Edwardians, Greater Birmingham (over a 20-year period) and North Midlands.",
"score": "1.8135285"
},
{
"id": "7774391",
"title": "Chris Street",
"text": " Along with basketball, Street also excelled in baseball and football during high school. He moved with his family to Indianola, Iowa in the fall of 1987 and starred on the town's Class 4A team at Indianola High School. Street committed to play basketball at the University of Iowa as a junior in high school. Street played in 28 games as a freshman and averaged 5.0 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. As a sophomore, he averaged 10.6 points and 8.2 rebounds per game. In the first 15 games of the 1992–93 season Street averaged 14.5 points and 9.5 rebounds per game. In his final game he ",
"score": "1.7653757"
},
{
"id": "7774390",
"title": "Chris Street",
"text": " Christopher Michael Street (February 2, 1972 – January 19, 1993) was an American college basketball player. He played as a power forward for the Iowa Hawkeyes from 1990 to 1993. A potential NBA player, he died in an automobile accident during his junior year at Iowa.",
"score": "1.7378836"
},
{
"id": "11969748",
"title": "Ben Street (ice hockey)",
"text": " As a youth, Street played in the 2000 and 2001 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with a minor ice hockey team from Burnaby. Street played his junior hockey with the Salmon Arm Silverbacks of the British Columbia Hockey League. After two seasons there, he joined the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program in 2005. He played 171 games for the Badgers between 2005 and 2010, scoring 47 goals and recording 94 points. Street was a member of the Badgers' 2006 national championship team, and shared the team's captaincy in his junior and senior seasons. He was named to numerous academic All-Conference teams. Street was named ",
"score": "1.7271695"
},
{
"id": "4215232",
"title": "Kevin Street",
"text": " Kevin Street (born 25 November 1977) is an English footballer whose playing position is as a Midfielder for Whitchurch Alport.",
"score": "1.7047286"
},
{
"id": "3968103",
"title": "Francis Street (cricketer)",
"text": " Francis Edward Street (16 February 1851 – 4 June 1928) was an English cricketer who played in four first-class matches for Kent County Cricket Club during the mid 1870s. He was a right-handed batsman who played regular club cricket for a range of sides as a prolific batsman. Street was born at Hampstead in Middlesex in 1851, the son of Henry and Jane Street. His father was a solicitor. Street was educated at Uppingham School where he played cricket in the school side. He played club cricket for Uppingham Rovers, a strong side during the 1880s, as well as other amateur sides such as Beckenham, Free Foresters, Incogniti and MCC. Living for a ",
"score": "1.694013"
},
{
"id": "12510603",
"title": "Tai Streets",
"text": " attending his basketball games and track meets. He knew Streets wanted to play wide receiver. He realized football could provide a better college opportunity than basketball, especially for a 6 ft athlete such as himself. After he returned to football, he became widely known in all three sports. As a sophomore in 1992–93, Streets scored 20 points and posted 12 rebounds in his first varsity basketball game for Rich South on January 22, 1993. The team finished that season with a 14–10 record. That same season, Streets won the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) triple jump championship. As a junior, he helped the team compile a ",
"score": "1.6817663"
},
{
"id": "10461212",
"title": "Gabby Street",
"text": " Born in Huntsville, Alabama, Street (who batted and threw right-handed) was a weak hitter. He batted only .208 in a seven-year playing career (1904–05; 1908–12) in 502 games with the Cincinnati Reds, Boston Beaneaters, Washington Senators, and New York Highlanders. Apart from 1908 to 1909, when he was the Senators' first-string catcher, he was a part-time player. Street holds the record for the longest gap between Major League games – 19 years (1912–1931). However, on August 21, 1908, Street achieved a measure of immortality by catching a baseball dropped from the top of the Washington Monument—a distance of 555 feet (169 m). After muffing the first 12 balls thrown by ",
"score": "1.6792057"
},
{
"id": "3514842",
"title": "Henry Street (cricketer)",
"text": " Henry Street (18 April 1863 — 12 March 1953) was an English cricketer who played for Derbyshire in 1887. Street was born in Riddings, Derbyshire, the son of Henry Street, a coal miner, and his wife Ann. In 1881 he was living with his parents at Alfreton where he was also a coal miner. Street made his first-class debut for Derbyshire in the 1887 season in July against Lancashire when he ended the game at 15 not out. In his second match against Yorkshire he made 9. He played no more first-class matches, but took part in a miscellaneous game against Essex. Street was a right hand batsman and played three innings in two first-class matches, with an average of 8 and a top score of 15 not out. Street died at Riddings at the age of 89.",
"score": "1.6760857"
},
{
"id": "5367699",
"title": "James Street (American football)",
"text": " Street was drafted in the 31st round of the 1970 Major League Baseball Draft by the Cleveland Indians, but after suffering an injury at the 1970 College World Series he chose not to play in the Indians' farm system, thereby ending his career. In 1991, Street started a successful career as a settlement planner, owning his own business, The James Street Group. He had five sons, including three who won National Championships playing baseball for Texas. His oldest son Ryan Street, from his first marriage attended Texas Tech. Street and his wife of 32 years, Janie Street had four sons, former Longhorn and Los Angeles Angels closer Huston Street, former Longhorn and minor league pitcher Juston Street, former Longhorn pitcher Jordon Street and Pepperdine infielder Hanson Street who earned an MBA at the Red McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas. Juston Street went into acting, and one of his first film appearances was playing his father, James Street, in the film My All American. Street died of a heart attack at his home in Austin, Texas, on September 30, 2013.",
"score": "1.6736193"
},
{
"id": "5367691",
"title": "James Street (American football)",
"text": " James Lowell Street (August 2, 1948 – September 30, 2013) was a two-sport star athlete at the University of Texas. As quarterback, he led the team to the 1969 National Championship in football and posted a perfect 20-0 record, the most wins without a loss in Longhorns history. As a pitcher he was a two time All-American who threw the only perfect game in University of Texas history.",
"score": "1.6716087"
},
{
"id": "15571028",
"title": "Norm Street",
"text": " Norman Ogilvie \"Norm\" Street (10 July 1876 – 10 June 1963) was a rugby union player who represented Australia. Street, a flanker, was born in Bathurst, NSW and claimed one international rugby cap for Australia. His debut game was against Great Britain, at Brisbane, on 22 July 1899.",
"score": "1.6708595"
},
{
"id": "8101058",
"title": "Alfred Street (cricket umpire)",
"text": " Alfred Edward Street, born at Godalming, Surrey, on 7 July 1869 and died at Exmouth, Devon, on 18 February 1951, was a cricket player for Surrey and later a respected cricket umpire who stood in several Test matches between 1912 and 1926. As a player, Street was a middle or lower order right-handed batsman and an occasional medium-pace bowler. He played regularly for the successful Surrey side in only three seasons, from 1894 to 1896, and his one innings of distinction was an unbeaten 161 against Leicestershire at Grace Road, Leicester in 1895, when his batting enabled a Surrey recovery from 94 for six wickets to reach a total of 385, which proved enough to win by ",
"score": "1.6700892"
},
{
"id": "4215233",
"title": "Kevin Street",
"text": " Street, a strong passing central midfielder, began his career at Crewe Alexandra in 1997. After a loan move to Luton Town in 2001, he then joined Northwich Victoria in 2002 on a permanent deal before transfers to Bristol Rovers 2002–2003, Shrewsbury Town 2003–2005, Stafford Rangers 2005–2008, Altrincham 2008–2009, and Nantwich Town 2009–2011. In June 2011 he returned to Stafford Rangers in an attempt to gain a deal for the 2011–12 season and on 11 July signed a deal with the club. In late September during the 2012–2013 season he left the club by mutual consent. He later signed for Kidsgrove Athletic. In July 2014 he joined Alsager Town.",
"score": "1.6671308"
},
{
"id": "3846074",
"title": "Peter Street",
"text": " After his AFL career Street worked as a police officer and is now a Sergeant at the public order response unit St Joseph's Football Club announced the signing former Geelong and Western Bulldogs ruckman Peter Street for 2009 season. Street agreed to a one-year deal and will take on an assistant-coaching role as well as the club's ruck duties. He would continue right until the 2012 season before heading to Lara in 2013. Street now lines up for the Geelong Amateurs in the Bellarine Football League.",
"score": "1.6661158"
},
{
"id": "12510614",
"title": "Tai Streets",
"text": " Streets played college football and basketball at the University of Michigan. As a true freshman in the 1995 NCAA Division I-A football season, Streets only caught five passes for the 1995 Michigan Wolverines football team: he caught three in the 52–17 October 28 Little Brown Jug rivalry game victory against the Minnesota Golden Gophers and two in the 31–23 November 25 Michigan – Ohio State rivalry game with the Ohio State Buckeyes. All five athletes who had more receptions than him that season went on to play professional football (Mercury Hayes − 48, Amani Toomer – 44, Jay Riemersma – 41, Chris Howard – 14 and ",
"score": "1.6652203"
},
{
"id": "1327848",
"title": "Huston Street",
"text": " Street attended Westlake High School in Austin, Texas, from 1997 to 2001, where he lettered in both football and baseball, winning all-state and all-district honors in both sports. He then attended the University of Texas at Austin from 2001–2004, where he pitched for the school's baseball team. Statistically one of the best collegiate closers of all time, Street is in the top 20 for career saves (41) and fewest hits allowed per nine innings (5.46). Street received All-American honors at Texas every season he was there, and helped his team win the College World Series of collegiate baseball in 2002. In that season, he set a CWS record for the most saves and was named Most Outstanding Player. He won the USA Baseball Richard W. \"Dick\" Case Award in 2003. A year later, Street led the Longhorns to the Series semifinals, and in 2004, he helped his team to the finals, only to lose in two games to Cal State Fullerton. In 2010, Street was named to the NCAA College World Series Legends Team.",
"score": "1.6633856"
},
{
"id": "32665258",
"title": "Charlie Street",
"text": " Charles Street (8 November 1909 – 24 June 1982) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Richmond and Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Street played at Richmond for three seasons, without ever becoming a regular fixture in the team. He then crossed to Carlton and was in a back pocket in their 1932 VFL Grand Final loss to Richmond.",
"score": "1.6623931"
},
{
"id": "5367693",
"title": "James Street (American football)",
"text": " Street arrived at Texas as a seventh-string quarterback in 1966. After playing only a handful of plays in two blowout games in 1967, Street came into the 1968 season as the backup to Bill Bradley. That year, Darrell Royal and assistant Emory Bellard introduced the wishbone. After tying #11 Houston in the first game and a slow start in the second against Texas Tech, Street took over at quarterback. \"Hell, you can’t do any worse. Get in there,\" Royal reportedly said when replacing Bradley with Street. Despite running up 22 points in the 3rd quarter, Texas would lose that game, but Street would never find himself on the losing side again. He engineered the Longhorns' offense from that game to the 1970 Cotton Bowl Classic, reeling off 20 straight wins without a ",
"score": "1.6522391"
},
{
"id": "25001324",
"title": "Jack Street (footballer, born 1928)",
"text": " Born in West Derby, Liverpool, Street played for signed for Tranmere Rovers, Southport, Bootle Athletic, Reading, Barrow and Netherfield. He died in Leeds on 26 April 2019.",
"score": "1.6475339"
}
] | [
"Gary Street\n Street played as a scrum-half for Aston Old Edwardians, Greater Birmingham (over a 20-year period) and North Midlands.",
"Chris Street\n Along with basketball, Street also excelled in baseball and football during high school. He moved with his family to Indianola, Iowa in the fall of 1987 and starred on the town's Class 4A team at Indianola High School. Street committed to play basketball at the University of Iowa as a junior in high school. Street played in 28 games as a freshman and averaged 5.0 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. As a sophomore, he averaged 10.6 points and 8.2 rebounds per game. In the first 15 games of the 1992–93 season Street averaged 14.5 points and 9.5 rebounds per game. In his final game he ",
"Chris Street\n Christopher Michael Street (February 2, 1972 – January 19, 1993) was an American college basketball player. He played as a power forward for the Iowa Hawkeyes from 1990 to 1993. A potential NBA player, he died in an automobile accident during his junior year at Iowa.",
"Ben Street (ice hockey)\n As a youth, Street played in the 2000 and 2001 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with a minor ice hockey team from Burnaby. Street played his junior hockey with the Salmon Arm Silverbacks of the British Columbia Hockey League. After two seasons there, he joined the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program in 2005. He played 171 games for the Badgers between 2005 and 2010, scoring 47 goals and recording 94 points. Street was a member of the Badgers' 2006 national championship team, and shared the team's captaincy in his junior and senior seasons. He was named to numerous academic All-Conference teams. Street was named ",
"Kevin Street\n Kevin Street (born 25 November 1977) is an English footballer whose playing position is as a Midfielder for Whitchurch Alport.",
"Francis Street (cricketer)\n Francis Edward Street (16 February 1851 – 4 June 1928) was an English cricketer who played in four first-class matches for Kent County Cricket Club during the mid 1870s. He was a right-handed batsman who played regular club cricket for a range of sides as a prolific batsman. Street was born at Hampstead in Middlesex in 1851, the son of Henry and Jane Street. His father was a solicitor. Street was educated at Uppingham School where he played cricket in the school side. He played club cricket for Uppingham Rovers, a strong side during the 1880s, as well as other amateur sides such as Beckenham, Free Foresters, Incogniti and MCC. Living for a ",
"Tai Streets\n attending his basketball games and track meets. He knew Streets wanted to play wide receiver. He realized football could provide a better college opportunity than basketball, especially for a 6 ft athlete such as himself. After he returned to football, he became widely known in all three sports. As a sophomore in 1992–93, Streets scored 20 points and posted 12 rebounds in his first varsity basketball game for Rich South on January 22, 1993. The team finished that season with a 14–10 record. That same season, Streets won the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) triple jump championship. As a junior, he helped the team compile a ",
"Gabby Street\n Born in Huntsville, Alabama, Street (who batted and threw right-handed) was a weak hitter. He batted only .208 in a seven-year playing career (1904–05; 1908–12) in 502 games with the Cincinnati Reds, Boston Beaneaters, Washington Senators, and New York Highlanders. Apart from 1908 to 1909, when he was the Senators' first-string catcher, he was a part-time player. Street holds the record for the longest gap between Major League games – 19 years (1912–1931). However, on August 21, 1908, Street achieved a measure of immortality by catching a baseball dropped from the top of the Washington Monument—a distance of 555 feet (169 m). After muffing the first 12 balls thrown by ",
"Henry Street (cricketer)\n Henry Street (18 April 1863 — 12 March 1953) was an English cricketer who played for Derbyshire in 1887. Street was born in Riddings, Derbyshire, the son of Henry Street, a coal miner, and his wife Ann. In 1881 he was living with his parents at Alfreton where he was also a coal miner. Street made his first-class debut for Derbyshire in the 1887 season in July against Lancashire when he ended the game at 15 not out. In his second match against Yorkshire he made 9. He played no more first-class matches, but took part in a miscellaneous game against Essex. Street was a right hand batsman and played three innings in two first-class matches, with an average of 8 and a top score of 15 not out. Street died at Riddings at the age of 89.",
"James Street (American football)\n Street was drafted in the 31st round of the 1970 Major League Baseball Draft by the Cleveland Indians, but after suffering an injury at the 1970 College World Series he chose not to play in the Indians' farm system, thereby ending his career. In 1991, Street started a successful career as a settlement planner, owning his own business, The James Street Group. He had five sons, including three who won National Championships playing baseball for Texas. His oldest son Ryan Street, from his first marriage attended Texas Tech. Street and his wife of 32 years, Janie Street had four sons, former Longhorn and Los Angeles Angels closer Huston Street, former Longhorn and minor league pitcher Juston Street, former Longhorn pitcher Jordon Street and Pepperdine infielder Hanson Street who earned an MBA at the Red McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas. Juston Street went into acting, and one of his first film appearances was playing his father, James Street, in the film My All American. Street died of a heart attack at his home in Austin, Texas, on September 30, 2013.",
"James Street (American football)\n James Lowell Street (August 2, 1948 – September 30, 2013) was a two-sport star athlete at the University of Texas. As quarterback, he led the team to the 1969 National Championship in football and posted a perfect 20-0 record, the most wins without a loss in Longhorns history. As a pitcher he was a two time All-American who threw the only perfect game in University of Texas history.",
"Norm Street\n Norman Ogilvie \"Norm\" Street (10 July 1876 – 10 June 1963) was a rugby union player who represented Australia. Street, a flanker, was born in Bathurst, NSW and claimed one international rugby cap for Australia. His debut game was against Great Britain, at Brisbane, on 22 July 1899.",
"Alfred Street (cricket umpire)\n Alfred Edward Street, born at Godalming, Surrey, on 7 July 1869 and died at Exmouth, Devon, on 18 February 1951, was a cricket player for Surrey and later a respected cricket umpire who stood in several Test matches between 1912 and 1926. As a player, Street was a middle or lower order right-handed batsman and an occasional medium-pace bowler. He played regularly for the successful Surrey side in only three seasons, from 1894 to 1896, and his one innings of distinction was an unbeaten 161 against Leicestershire at Grace Road, Leicester in 1895, when his batting enabled a Surrey recovery from 94 for six wickets to reach a total of 385, which proved enough to win by ",
"Kevin Street\n Street, a strong passing central midfielder, began his career at Crewe Alexandra in 1997. After a loan move to Luton Town in 2001, he then joined Northwich Victoria in 2002 on a permanent deal before transfers to Bristol Rovers 2002–2003, Shrewsbury Town 2003–2005, Stafford Rangers 2005–2008, Altrincham 2008–2009, and Nantwich Town 2009–2011. In June 2011 he returned to Stafford Rangers in an attempt to gain a deal for the 2011–12 season and on 11 July signed a deal with the club. In late September during the 2012–2013 season he left the club by mutual consent. He later signed for Kidsgrove Athletic. In July 2014 he joined Alsager Town.",
"Peter Street\n After his AFL career Street worked as a police officer and is now a Sergeant at the public order response unit St Joseph's Football Club announced the signing former Geelong and Western Bulldogs ruckman Peter Street for 2009 season. Street agreed to a one-year deal and will take on an assistant-coaching role as well as the club's ruck duties. He would continue right until the 2012 season before heading to Lara in 2013. Street now lines up for the Geelong Amateurs in the Bellarine Football League.",
"Tai Streets\n Streets played college football and basketball at the University of Michigan. As a true freshman in the 1995 NCAA Division I-A football season, Streets only caught five passes for the 1995 Michigan Wolverines football team: he caught three in the 52–17 October 28 Little Brown Jug rivalry game victory against the Minnesota Golden Gophers and two in the 31–23 November 25 Michigan – Ohio State rivalry game with the Ohio State Buckeyes. All five athletes who had more receptions than him that season went on to play professional football (Mercury Hayes − 48, Amani Toomer – 44, Jay Riemersma – 41, Chris Howard – 14 and ",
"Huston Street\n Street attended Westlake High School in Austin, Texas, from 1997 to 2001, where he lettered in both football and baseball, winning all-state and all-district honors in both sports. He then attended the University of Texas at Austin from 2001–2004, where he pitched for the school's baseball team. Statistically one of the best collegiate closers of all time, Street is in the top 20 for career saves (41) and fewest hits allowed per nine innings (5.46). Street received All-American honors at Texas every season he was there, and helped his team win the College World Series of collegiate baseball in 2002. In that season, he set a CWS record for the most saves and was named Most Outstanding Player. He won the USA Baseball Richard W. \"Dick\" Case Award in 2003. A year later, Street led the Longhorns to the Series semifinals, and in 2004, he helped his team to the finals, only to lose in two games to Cal State Fullerton. In 2010, Street was named to the NCAA College World Series Legends Team.",
"Charlie Street\n Charles Street (8 November 1909 – 24 June 1982) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Richmond and Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Street played at Richmond for three seasons, without ever becoming a regular fixture in the team. He then crossed to Carlton and was in a back pocket in their 1932 VFL Grand Final loss to Richmond.",
"James Street (American football)\n Street arrived at Texas as a seventh-string quarterback in 1966. After playing only a handful of plays in two blowout games in 1967, Street came into the 1968 season as the backup to Bill Bradley. That year, Darrell Royal and assistant Emory Bellard introduced the wishbone. After tying #11 Houston in the first game and a slow start in the second against Texas Tech, Street took over at quarterback. \"Hell, you can’t do any worse. Get in there,\" Royal reportedly said when replacing Bradley with Street. Despite running up 22 points in the 3rd quarter, Texas would lose that game, but Street would never find himself on the losing side again. He engineered the Longhorns' offense from that game to the 1970 Cotton Bowl Classic, reeling off 20 straight wins without a ",
"Jack Street (footballer, born 1928)\n Born in West Derby, Liverpool, Street played for signed for Tranmere Rovers, Southport, Bootle Athletic, Reading, Barrow and Netherfield. He died in Leeds on 26 April 2019."
] |
What sport does Juan Carlos Stauskas play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Juan Carlos Stauskas | 6,120,764 | 41 | [
{
"id": "3085153",
"title": "Juan Carlos (footballer, born 1990)",
"text": " Juan Carlos Pérez López (born 30 March 1990), known as Juan Carlos or Juankar, is a Spanish professional footballer who plays for Greek club Panathinaikos F.C. mainly as a left winger but also as a left back. He was known as El Galgo de Boadilla (Greyhound of Boadilla) for his runs and speed.",
"score": "1.7559702"
},
{
"id": "11771968",
"title": "Nik Stauskas",
"text": " Stauskas gravitated toward basketball during his childhood. Stauskas has never played ice hockey and has barely played street hockey. He tried soccer at age six, but a broken arm put an end to that. His first experience with basketball came as a member of the Aušra Sports Club, which is a Toronto-based traveling team for children of Lithuanian descent. Stauskas grew up a Raptors fan with Vince Carter as his favorite player. At age eight or nine, he \"played\" Carter one-on-one at a Raptors open practice for fans held at Air Canada Centre, which boosted his enthusiasm for the sport. Ever since then shooting a basketball has been his favorite form of recreation. He became so devoted to basketball that ",
"score": "1.7339771"
},
{
"id": "12935656",
"title": "Carlos Nevado",
"text": " Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"score": "1.7257304"
},
{
"id": "14837774",
"title": "Juan Carlos Zubczuk",
"text": " Juan Carlos Zubczuk Miszuk (born March 31, 1965 in Oberá, Misiones) is an Argentine-Peruvian retired professional football goalkeeper. He is of Ukrainian descent.",
"score": "1.6396804"
},
{
"id": "8892341",
"title": "Juan Carlos Stevens",
"text": " Juan Carlos Stevens (born October 22, 1968 in Santiago de Cuba) is an athlete from Cuba, who competes in archery.",
"score": "1.6384454"
},
{
"id": "25352763",
"title": "Juan Manuel Esparis",
"text": " Juan Manuel Esparis (born October 28, 1978) is a field hockey forward from Argentina, who was a member of the Men's National Team that competed at the 2003 Champions Trophy in Amstelveen, Netherlands. He played club hockey for Banco Provincia in Buenos Aires.",
"score": "1.6308677"
},
{
"id": "14837775",
"title": "Juan Carlos Zubczuk",
"text": " He played for Racing Club de Avellaneda in Argentina, he also played for Universitario de Deportes and Alianza Atlético in Peru.",
"score": "1.6128091"
},
{
"id": "11772015",
"title": "Nik Stauskas",
"text": " Stauskas played for Canada in the 2009 FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship held in Argentina. He helped lead the Canadian junior national team to a bronze medal, which qualified them for the 2010 FIBA Under-17 World Championship. He averaged 9.4 points per game in the tournament, including a game-high 21 points in a 126–78 loss against the United States team led by Bradley Beal and James Michael McAdoo on June 20, 2009. First overall 2013 NBA draft pick Anthony Bennett was one of Stauskas' teammates in the tournament. Stauskas was later invited to train with the Canadian senior national team. He represented Canada at the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship, contributing 111 points in 9 games—including 18-for-36 three-point shooting, but did not play in the team's final game. Food poisoning had impaired him in the semifinal loss against Venezuela, and the illness caused him to miss the bronze medal game against Mexico, which Canada won 87–86.",
"score": "1.6064343"
},
{
"id": "8201008",
"title": "Juan Carlos Blanco (volleyball)",
"text": " Juan Carlos Blanco (born July 27, 1981) is a volleyball setter from Venezuela, who won the gold medal with the men's national team at the 2003 Pan American Games in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. In the final his team defeated Cuba 3–0 (25–23, 25–18, 25–20). He won with his team the gold medal at the 2005 Bolivarian Games.",
"score": "1.5946836"
},
{
"id": "16014485",
"title": "Carlos Lopez-Barillas",
"text": " gold medals in the Central American Games in 1985, 1989, and 1993, also gold in the Central America Mexico and Caribbean games of 1986 and 1990. After his move to Europe he continued playing waterpolo in Ireland, playing with the team Clonard in the first division of the Irish Waterpolo League. Lopez-Barillas suffered a serious accident while snowboarding in 2002, fracturing his left arm and requiring reconstructive surgery to his left wrist and hand, to date he is still active in skateboarding, snowboarding, surfing and kite surfing. He is still active playing Squash at competition level in London, UK.",
"score": "1.5874164"
},
{
"id": "11771966",
"title": "Nik Stauskas",
"text": " Nikolas Tomas Stauskas (born October 7, 1993) is a Canadian professional basketball player for the Grand Rapids Gold of the NBA G League. A native of Mississauga, Ontario, Stauskas played two seasons of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition for the Michigan Wolverines ending with the 2013–14 team before declaring for the NBA draft. Stauskas was drafted eighth overall in the 2014 NBA draft by the Sacramento Kings, for which he began his NBA career. Towards the end of his rookie season, Stauskas was tagged with the nickname Sauce Castillo after a closed captioning error resulted in a social media meme. Stauskas, whose family is of Lithuanian heritage, is a member of the Canadian national basketball team. Stauskas divided his high school years between Loyola Catholic Secondary School, South Kent School and St. Mark's School, leading the latter to back-to-back New England Preparatory ",
"score": "1.5823159"
},
{
"id": "11771969",
"title": "Nik Stauskas",
"text": " head coach at Michigan, John Beilein, said in 2013, \"He doesn't know anything about hockey, he doesn't know anything about football. The other day we had him try to throw a baseball pass as a press breaker. And he had never thrown a baseball.\" In fifth grade, his parents gave him and his brother a choice on how to landscape their backyard: a swimming pool, a putting green or a basketball court, leading to the family backyard court. He and his older brother Peter would play at all hours and all conditions, including a 2006 ice storm that was so severe that, as he recalled in 2013, \"The ball couldn't hit the backboard without slipping off, but we didn't care.\"",
"score": "1.5770358"
},
{
"id": "28459045",
"title": "Juan Ignacio Rodríguez",
"text": " Juan Ignacio Rodríguez Liebana (born June 19, 1992) is a Spanish competitive archer. He won a silver medal as a member of the nation's archery squad at the 2013 Mediterranean Games and at the 2015 European Games. Since his sporting debut as a 19-year-old, Fernandez currently trains under the tutelage of his Korean-born coach Cho Hyung-mok for the Spanish team, while shooting at a local archery range in his native Las Rozas de Madrid. Rodríguez rose to prominence in the international archery scene, when he and his compatriots Antonio Fernández and eventual individual champion Miguel Alvariño obtained a silver medal in the men's team recurve final against Ukraine at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan. He promptly followed the team archery results by helping the Spaniards secure a full quota spot for Rio 2016 at the World Championships few months later in Copenhagen, Denmark, booking ",
"score": "1.5725954"
},
{
"id": "6608281",
"title": "Juan Martín López",
"text": " Juan Martín López (born 27 May 1985) is an Argentine field hockey player for Banco Provincia. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament. Juan Martín has won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup and three gold medals at the Pan American Games. The midfielder was also part of the Argentinian squad which won the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics. He plays club hockey for Banco Provincia.",
"score": "1.566797"
},
{
"id": "1359440",
"title": "J. C. Sulbaran",
"text": " Juan Carlos Sulbaran (born November 9, 1989 in Willemstad, Curaçao) is a Dutch baseball player for L&D Amsterdam of the Honkbal Hoofdklasse and who has played for the Dutch national team. He throws a changeup, curveball and fastball (which peaks at around 90 mph). He played for Team Netherlands in the 2019 European Baseball Championship, at the Africa/Europe 2020 Olympic Qualification tournament, in Italy in September 2019.",
"score": "1.56534"
},
{
"id": "11771983",
"title": "Nik Stauskas",
"text": " a game-high 24 points on November 21 against Long Beach State in the first round of the Puerto Rico Tip-Off, surpassing his career high set two games before and giving him three consecutive 20-point performances for the first time in his career. Stauskas established another career high the next day against Florida State as he scored 26 points including 7 of the team's 13 points in overtime, despite scoring only 3 points in the first half. In the game, he set a career high with 9 made free throws and logged his fourth consecutive 20 point game. Following a Michigan timeout with 11 seconds in regulation, Stauskas ",
"score": "1.5585283"
},
{
"id": "25776437",
"title": "Juan Manuel Vivaldi",
"text": " Juan Manuel Vivaldi (born 17 July 1979) is an Argentine field hockey goalkeeper, who plays club hockey in his native country for Banco Provincia. He was a member of the men's national team from 2001 to 2021, and was the stand-in for first choice goalie Pablo Moreira at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where the South Americans finished in 11th position. Vivaldi was also on the side that ended up fifth at the 2003 Champions Trophy in Amstelveen, and won the 2005 Champions Challenge tournament in Alexandria, Egypt. He was part of the Argentine team that finished in 10th position at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He played for the Argentine team that won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup, beating England in the bronze medal playoff. Juan Manuel has also won three medals at the Pan American Games and two Champions Challenge. In July 2019, he was selected in the Argentina squad for the 2019 Pan American Games. They won the gold medal by defeating Canada 5-2 in the final.",
"score": "1.5503337"
},
{
"id": "7447697",
"title": "Juan Coghen",
"text": " Juan Luis Coghen Alberdingk-Thijm (born July 9, 1959) is a former field hockey player from Spain who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1980 Summer Olympics of Moscow.",
"score": "1.5329219"
},
{
"id": "14971991",
"title": "Juan Sosa",
"text": " Juan Luis Sosa Encarnación (born August 19, 1975 in San Francisco de Macorís, Dominican Republic) is a former Major League Baseball player who played for two seasons. He played as a shortstop in the minor leagues but spent most of his time in the majors as a center fielder. He played for the Colorado Rockies in 1999 and the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001. While with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001, appearing in one game, he had one at bat and struck out. He also had an assist playing third base. However, he received a 2001 World Series championship ring.",
"score": "1.5277574"
},
{
"id": "4417369",
"title": "Juan Carlos Dasque",
"text": " Juan Carlos Dasque (born 12 October 1952 ) is an Argentine sport shooter who specializes in double trap and trap. At the 2008 Olympic Games he finished in joint thirteenth place in the trap qualification, missing a place among the top six, who progressed to the final round.",
"score": "1.5237035"
}
] | [
"Juan Carlos (footballer, born 1990)\n Juan Carlos Pérez López (born 30 March 1990), known as Juan Carlos or Juankar, is a Spanish professional footballer who plays for Greek club Panathinaikos F.C. mainly as a left winger but also as a left back. He was known as El Galgo de Boadilla (Greyhound of Boadilla) for his runs and speed.",
"Nik Stauskas\n Stauskas gravitated toward basketball during his childhood. Stauskas has never played ice hockey and has barely played street hockey. He tried soccer at age six, but a broken arm put an end to that. His first experience with basketball came as a member of the Aušra Sports Club, which is a Toronto-based traveling team for children of Lithuanian descent. Stauskas grew up a Raptors fan with Vince Carter as his favorite player. At age eight or nine, he \"played\" Carter one-on-one at a Raptors open practice for fans held at Air Canada Centre, which boosted his enthusiasm for the sport. Ever since then shooting a basketball has been his favorite form of recreation. He became so devoted to basketball that ",
"Carlos Nevado\n Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.",
"Juan Carlos Zubczuk\n Juan Carlos Zubczuk Miszuk (born March 31, 1965 in Oberá, Misiones) is an Argentine-Peruvian retired professional football goalkeeper. He is of Ukrainian descent.",
"Juan Carlos Stevens\n Juan Carlos Stevens (born October 22, 1968 in Santiago de Cuba) is an athlete from Cuba, who competes in archery.",
"Juan Manuel Esparis\n Juan Manuel Esparis (born October 28, 1978) is a field hockey forward from Argentina, who was a member of the Men's National Team that competed at the 2003 Champions Trophy in Amstelveen, Netherlands. He played club hockey for Banco Provincia in Buenos Aires.",
"Juan Carlos Zubczuk\n He played for Racing Club de Avellaneda in Argentina, he also played for Universitario de Deportes and Alianza Atlético in Peru.",
"Nik Stauskas\n Stauskas played for Canada in the 2009 FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship held in Argentina. He helped lead the Canadian junior national team to a bronze medal, which qualified them for the 2010 FIBA Under-17 World Championship. He averaged 9.4 points per game in the tournament, including a game-high 21 points in a 126–78 loss against the United States team led by Bradley Beal and James Michael McAdoo on June 20, 2009. First overall 2013 NBA draft pick Anthony Bennett was one of Stauskas' teammates in the tournament. Stauskas was later invited to train with the Canadian senior national team. He represented Canada at the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship, contributing 111 points in 9 games—including 18-for-36 three-point shooting, but did not play in the team's final game. Food poisoning had impaired him in the semifinal loss against Venezuela, and the illness caused him to miss the bronze medal game against Mexico, which Canada won 87–86.",
"Juan Carlos Blanco (volleyball)\n Juan Carlos Blanco (born July 27, 1981) is a volleyball setter from Venezuela, who won the gold medal with the men's national team at the 2003 Pan American Games in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. In the final his team defeated Cuba 3–0 (25–23, 25–18, 25–20). He won with his team the gold medal at the 2005 Bolivarian Games.",
"Carlos Lopez-Barillas\n gold medals in the Central American Games in 1985, 1989, and 1993, also gold in the Central America Mexico and Caribbean games of 1986 and 1990. After his move to Europe he continued playing waterpolo in Ireland, playing with the team Clonard in the first division of the Irish Waterpolo League. Lopez-Barillas suffered a serious accident while snowboarding in 2002, fracturing his left arm and requiring reconstructive surgery to his left wrist and hand, to date he is still active in skateboarding, snowboarding, surfing and kite surfing. He is still active playing Squash at competition level in London, UK.",
"Nik Stauskas\n Nikolas Tomas Stauskas (born October 7, 1993) is a Canadian professional basketball player for the Grand Rapids Gold of the NBA G League. A native of Mississauga, Ontario, Stauskas played two seasons of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition for the Michigan Wolverines ending with the 2013–14 team before declaring for the NBA draft. Stauskas was drafted eighth overall in the 2014 NBA draft by the Sacramento Kings, for which he began his NBA career. Towards the end of his rookie season, Stauskas was tagged with the nickname Sauce Castillo after a closed captioning error resulted in a social media meme. Stauskas, whose family is of Lithuanian heritage, is a member of the Canadian national basketball team. Stauskas divided his high school years between Loyola Catholic Secondary School, South Kent School and St. Mark's School, leading the latter to back-to-back New England Preparatory ",
"Nik Stauskas\n head coach at Michigan, John Beilein, said in 2013, \"He doesn't know anything about hockey, he doesn't know anything about football. The other day we had him try to throw a baseball pass as a press breaker. And he had never thrown a baseball.\" In fifth grade, his parents gave him and his brother a choice on how to landscape their backyard: a swimming pool, a putting green or a basketball court, leading to the family backyard court. He and his older brother Peter would play at all hours and all conditions, including a 2006 ice storm that was so severe that, as he recalled in 2013, \"The ball couldn't hit the backboard without slipping off, but we didn't care.\"",
"Juan Ignacio Rodríguez\n Juan Ignacio Rodríguez Liebana (born June 19, 1992) is a Spanish competitive archer. He won a silver medal as a member of the nation's archery squad at the 2013 Mediterranean Games and at the 2015 European Games. Since his sporting debut as a 19-year-old, Fernandez currently trains under the tutelage of his Korean-born coach Cho Hyung-mok for the Spanish team, while shooting at a local archery range in his native Las Rozas de Madrid. Rodríguez rose to prominence in the international archery scene, when he and his compatriots Antonio Fernández and eventual individual champion Miguel Alvariño obtained a silver medal in the men's team recurve final against Ukraine at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan. He promptly followed the team archery results by helping the Spaniards secure a full quota spot for Rio 2016 at the World Championships few months later in Copenhagen, Denmark, booking ",
"Juan Martín López\n Juan Martín López (born 27 May 1985) is an Argentine field hockey player for Banco Provincia. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament. Juan Martín has won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup and three gold medals at the Pan American Games. The midfielder was also part of the Argentinian squad which won the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics. He plays club hockey for Banco Provincia.",
"J. C. Sulbaran\n Juan Carlos Sulbaran (born November 9, 1989 in Willemstad, Curaçao) is a Dutch baseball player for L&D Amsterdam of the Honkbal Hoofdklasse and who has played for the Dutch national team. He throws a changeup, curveball and fastball (which peaks at around 90 mph). He played for Team Netherlands in the 2019 European Baseball Championship, at the Africa/Europe 2020 Olympic Qualification tournament, in Italy in September 2019.",
"Nik Stauskas\n a game-high 24 points on November 21 against Long Beach State in the first round of the Puerto Rico Tip-Off, surpassing his career high set two games before and giving him three consecutive 20-point performances for the first time in his career. Stauskas established another career high the next day against Florida State as he scored 26 points including 7 of the team's 13 points in overtime, despite scoring only 3 points in the first half. In the game, he set a career high with 9 made free throws and logged his fourth consecutive 20 point game. Following a Michigan timeout with 11 seconds in regulation, Stauskas ",
"Juan Manuel Vivaldi\n Juan Manuel Vivaldi (born 17 July 1979) is an Argentine field hockey goalkeeper, who plays club hockey in his native country for Banco Provincia. He was a member of the men's national team from 2001 to 2021, and was the stand-in for first choice goalie Pablo Moreira at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where the South Americans finished in 11th position. Vivaldi was also on the side that ended up fifth at the 2003 Champions Trophy in Amstelveen, and won the 2005 Champions Challenge tournament in Alexandria, Egypt. He was part of the Argentine team that finished in 10th position at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He played for the Argentine team that won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup, beating England in the bronze medal playoff. Juan Manuel has also won three medals at the Pan American Games and two Champions Challenge. In July 2019, he was selected in the Argentina squad for the 2019 Pan American Games. They won the gold medal by defeating Canada 5-2 in the final.",
"Juan Coghen\n Juan Luis Coghen Alberdingk-Thijm (born July 9, 1959) is a former field hockey player from Spain who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1980 Summer Olympics of Moscow.",
"Juan Sosa\n Juan Luis Sosa Encarnación (born August 19, 1975 in San Francisco de Macorís, Dominican Republic) is a former Major League Baseball player who played for two seasons. He played as a shortstop in the minor leagues but spent most of his time in the majors as a center fielder. He played for the Colorado Rockies in 1999 and the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001. While with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001, appearing in one game, he had one at bat and struck out. He also had an assist playing third base. However, he received a 2001 World Series championship ring.",
"Juan Carlos Dasque\n Juan Carlos Dasque (born 12 October 1952 ) is an Argentine sport shooter who specializes in double trap and trap. At the 2008 Olympic Games he finished in joint thirteenth place in the trap qualification, missing a place among the top six, who progressed to the final round."
] |
What sport does 2011 Chatham Cup play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2011 Chatham Cup | 3,173,188 | 68 | [
{
"id": "28034812",
"title": "2011 Chatham Cup",
"text": "* Won on penalties by Bay Olympic (5-3) ",
"score": "1.7319194"
},
{
"id": "28034811",
"title": "2011 Chatham Cup",
"text": "* Won on penalties by Manurewa (5-4) and Western (4-1) Central United, East Coast Bays, Melville United, Onehunga Sports, and Three Kings United received byes to the Third Round. ",
"score": "1.6842227"
},
{
"id": "28034809",
"title": "2011 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 2011 ASB Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 84th knockout football competition. The 2011 competition had a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition was run in three regions (northern, central, southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw was open. In all, 120 teams entered the competition.",
"score": "1.667361"
},
{
"id": "26402914",
"title": "1991 Chatham Cup",
"text": "* Won on penalties by Ngongotaha (6-5), Stop Out (4-1), and Waterside (5-3) ; † New Plymouth OB disqualified for rule infringement ",
"score": "1.6551747"
},
{
"id": "26402912",
"title": "1991 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1991 Chatham Cup was the 64th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. Up to the last 16 of the competition, the cup was run in three regions (northern, central, and southern), with an open draw from the quarter-finals on. National League teams received a bye until the third round (last 64). In all, a record 174 teams took part in the competition. Tawa reached the final 16 by unusual means. They were defeated by New Plymouth Old Boys in the third round, but New Plymouth Old Boys were disqualified after the draw for the final 32 was made, which would have seen them playing against Rongotai College. Tawa were reinstated as winners of the third round match, but Rongotai refused to play against them, claiming that they should have been awarded the match against NPOB by default. Tawa were thus deemed to have won the fourth round game by a walk-over.",
"score": "1.6205597"
},
{
"id": "3674743",
"title": "1946 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1946 Chatham Cup was the 19th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Wellington Marist, Metro College (Auckland), Wanganui Old Boys, St. Andrews (Manawatu), Technical Old Boys (Christchurch), and Mosgiel.",
"score": "1.5997647"
},
{
"id": "32826506",
"title": "1930 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1930 Chatham Cup was the eighth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with five regional associations (Auckland, Wellington, Manawatu, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. In all, \"almost 30 teams\" took part. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Auckland Thistle (who defeated Auckland YMCA in the Auckland regional final ), St. Andrews (Manawatu), Petone, and Western (Christchurch). Other teams known to have taken part include Wellington's Hospital AFC, Diamonds, and Waterside; Canterbury's Christchurch Thistle, Nomads, and Rangers; and Dunedin teams Port Chalmers and Northern. The previous season's winners, Tramways caused something of a sensation when they defaulted their first round match as a protest at having to play under floodlights. Further controversy was caused when the North Island final was awarded in to Petone by forfeiture in questionable circumstances.",
"score": "1.5989428"
},
{
"id": "27957928",
"title": "2012 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 2012 ASB Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 85th knockout football competition. The 2012 competition has a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition is run in three regions (northern, central, southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw is open. In all, 124 teams entered the competition.",
"score": "1.5951636"
},
{
"id": "11267853",
"title": "2010 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 2010 Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 83rd knockout football competition. The 2010 competition had a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. In all, 135 teams took part in the 2010 competition.",
"score": "1.5940846"
},
{
"id": "28029356",
"title": "1946 in New Zealand",
"text": "14 September: A New Zealand team played a single game against Wellington, which they won 5–2 ; The Chatham Cup is won by Wellington Marist who beat Technical Old Boys of Christchurch 2–1 in the final. ; Provincial league champions: ; Auckland:\tMetro College ; Canterbury:\tWestern ; Hawke's Bay:\tNapier Rovers ; Nelson: ; Otago:\tMosgiel ; South Canterbury:\tFisherman ; Southland:\tInvercargill Thistle ; Taranaki:\tAlbion ; Waikato:\tRotowaro ; Wanganui:\tTechnical College Old Boys ; Wellington:\tWellington Marist ",
"score": "1.5924203"
},
{
"id": "28034810",
"title": "2011 Chatham Cup",
"text": " With both finalists coming from the lower North Island, it was decided by NZF to hold the final at a neutral venue in the same part of the country. As such, Palmerston North's Memorial Park played host to the final for the first time. The final was played in front of a crowd of some 3,000 spectators. Underdogs Wairarapa won the final largely through their Pacific Island combination of Seule Soromon and Pita Rabo. They took the lead in the 24th minute after a period of pressure, when striker Soromon latched onto a cross from right winger Dale Higham, heading the ball past Hawke's Bay goalkeeper Shaun Peta. Early in the second half, Wairarapa failed to double the lead, when a penalty taken by their captain Adam Cowan hit the woodwork. Napier came back strongly, scoring an equaliser through Fergus Neil in the 67th minute. From this point, however, the game was largely under Wairarapa's control, and a late goal from Rabo secured the win. The Jack Batty Memorial Cup for the final's most valuable player was awarded to Wairarapa's Scott Robinson.",
"score": "1.5908151"
},
{
"id": "11267857",
"title": "2010 Chatham Cup",
"text": "* Won on penalties by Lower Hutt (4-2) ",
"score": "1.5905162"
},
{
"id": "4017317",
"title": "1947 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1947 Chatham Cup was the 20th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included North Shore United, Waterside (Wellington), Wanganui Old Boys, St. Andrews (Manawatu), Technical Old Boys (Christchurch), Northern Hearts (Timaru), Mosgiel, and Invercargill Thistle.",
"score": "1.5869293"
},
{
"id": "26827479",
"title": "1992 Chatham Cup",
"text": " * Won on penalties by Mt. Roskill (4-3), Manurewa (7-6), and Western (6-5)",
"score": "1.5748551"
},
{
"id": "7444715",
"title": "1954 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1954 Chatham Cup was the 27th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Onehunga (Auckland), Eastern Union (Gisborne), Moturoa (New Plymouth), Napier Rovers, (Hawkes Bay), Wanganui Settlers (Wanganui), Kiwi United (Manawatu), Stop Out (Lower Hutt/Wellington), Woodbourne (Marlborough), Western (Christchurch), Northern (Dunedin), Brigadiers (Southland), Mangakino (Bay of Plenty), Millerton Thistle (Buller/West Coast).",
"score": "1.5728935"
},
{
"id": "4541016",
"title": "1949 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1949 Chatham Cup was the 22nd annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included: Eden AFC (Auckland), Hamilton Wanderers, Rotowaro Tigers (Waikato), Moturoa AFC (New Plymouth), Ohakea (Manawatu), Petone Settlers, Waterside (Wellington), Wigram, Technical Old Boys, Nomads (Christchurch), Northern AFC, Green Island FC (Dunedin), Stockton (West Coast) and Invercargill Thistle (Southland).",
"score": "1.5663867"
},
{
"id": "538120",
"title": "1931 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1931 Chatham Cup was the ninth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with six regional associations (Auckland, Walkato, Wellington, Manawatu, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. In all, 30 teams took part in the competition, though some reports suggest there may have been 31 teams, and for the first time the majority came from the South Island. This was an improvements over previous years, but still a tiny number considering that 514 teams were affiliated to the regional associations nationwide. Participation by Auckland teams was particularly poor, with only three sides from that city taking part.",
"score": "1.5625517"
},
{
"id": "14395073",
"title": "September 2011 in sports",
"text": "World Cup in New Zealand: ; Pool A in Auckland: 47–21 ; Pool B: ; In Invercargill: 34–24 ; In Dunedin: 9–13 ; Pool D in Rotorua: 49–25 ",
"score": "1.5606616"
},
{
"id": "27957929",
"title": "2012 Chatham Cup",
"text": " Won 6-1 by Central United over Lower Hutt City",
"score": "1.5590174"
},
{
"id": "539803",
"title": "1932 Chatham Cup",
"text": " The 1932 Chatham Cup was the tenth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with seven regional associations (Auckland, Walkato, Wellington, Manawatu, Buller, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. The Westland Association also ran qualifying finals. Taylorville were beaten by Dobson 5 - 1. Runanga and Cobden had to play two replays of the second Westland - Chatham Cup semi-final after the first result, a 4 - 2 victory for Runanga was protested by Cobden. The first replay was played at Dunollie where the large, raucous crowd eventually spilled on to the ground after a fight between two players with one spectator striking the referee. The ",
"score": "1.5557473"
}
] | [
"2011 Chatham Cup\n* Won on penalties by Bay Olympic (5-3) ",
"2011 Chatham Cup\n* Won on penalties by Manurewa (5-4) and Western (4-1) Central United, East Coast Bays, Melville United, Onehunga Sports, and Three Kings United received byes to the Third Round. ",
"2011 Chatham Cup\n The 2011 ASB Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 84th knockout football competition. The 2011 competition had a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition was run in three regions (northern, central, southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw was open. In all, 120 teams entered the competition.",
"1991 Chatham Cup\n* Won on penalties by Ngongotaha (6-5), Stop Out (4-1), and Waterside (5-3) ; † New Plymouth OB disqualified for rule infringement ",
"1991 Chatham Cup\n The 1991 Chatham Cup was the 64th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. Up to the last 16 of the competition, the cup was run in three regions (northern, central, and southern), with an open draw from the quarter-finals on. National League teams received a bye until the third round (last 64). In all, a record 174 teams took part in the competition. Tawa reached the final 16 by unusual means. They were defeated by New Plymouth Old Boys in the third round, but New Plymouth Old Boys were disqualified after the draw for the final 32 was made, which would have seen them playing against Rongotai College. Tawa were reinstated as winners of the third round match, but Rongotai refused to play against them, claiming that they should have been awarded the match against NPOB by default. Tawa were thus deemed to have won the fourth round game by a walk-over.",
"1946 Chatham Cup\n The 1946 Chatham Cup was the 19th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Wellington Marist, Metro College (Auckland), Wanganui Old Boys, St. Andrews (Manawatu), Technical Old Boys (Christchurch), and Mosgiel.",
"1930 Chatham Cup\n The 1930 Chatham Cup was the eighth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with five regional associations (Auckland, Wellington, Manawatu, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. In all, \"almost 30 teams\" took part. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Auckland Thistle (who defeated Auckland YMCA in the Auckland regional final ), St. Andrews (Manawatu), Petone, and Western (Christchurch). Other teams known to have taken part include Wellington's Hospital AFC, Diamonds, and Waterside; Canterbury's Christchurch Thistle, Nomads, and Rangers; and Dunedin teams Port Chalmers and Northern. The previous season's winners, Tramways caused something of a sensation when they defaulted their first round match as a protest at having to play under floodlights. Further controversy was caused when the North Island final was awarded in to Petone by forfeiture in questionable circumstances.",
"2012 Chatham Cup\n The 2012 ASB Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 85th knockout football competition. The 2012 competition has a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition is run in three regions (northern, central, southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw is open. In all, 124 teams entered the competition.",
"2010 Chatham Cup\n The 2010 Chatham Cup is New Zealand's 83rd knockout football competition. The 2010 competition had a preliminary round, a qualification round, and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. In all, 135 teams took part in the 2010 competition.",
"1946 in New Zealand\n14 September: A New Zealand team played a single game against Wellington, which they won 5–2 ; The Chatham Cup is won by Wellington Marist who beat Technical Old Boys of Christchurch 2–1 in the final. ; Provincial league champions: ; Auckland:\tMetro College ; Canterbury:\tWestern ; Hawke's Bay:\tNapier Rovers ; Nelson: ; Otago:\tMosgiel ; South Canterbury:\tFisherman ; Southland:\tInvercargill Thistle ; Taranaki:\tAlbion ; Waikato:\tRotowaro ; Wanganui:\tTechnical College Old Boys ; Wellington:\tWellington Marist ",
"2011 Chatham Cup\n With both finalists coming from the lower North Island, it was decided by NZF to hold the final at a neutral venue in the same part of the country. As such, Palmerston North's Memorial Park played host to the final for the first time. The final was played in front of a crowd of some 3,000 spectators. Underdogs Wairarapa won the final largely through their Pacific Island combination of Seule Soromon and Pita Rabo. They took the lead in the 24th minute after a period of pressure, when striker Soromon latched onto a cross from right winger Dale Higham, heading the ball past Hawke's Bay goalkeeper Shaun Peta. Early in the second half, Wairarapa failed to double the lead, when a penalty taken by their captain Adam Cowan hit the woodwork. Napier came back strongly, scoring an equaliser through Fergus Neil in the 67th minute. From this point, however, the game was largely under Wairarapa's control, and a late goal from Rabo secured the win. The Jack Batty Memorial Cup for the final's most valuable player was awarded to Wairarapa's Scott Robinson.",
"2010 Chatham Cup\n* Won on penalties by Lower Hutt (4-2) ",
"1947 Chatham Cup\n The 1947 Chatham Cup was the 20th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included North Shore United, Waterside (Wellington), Wanganui Old Boys, St. Andrews (Manawatu), Technical Old Boys (Christchurch), Northern Hearts (Timaru), Mosgiel, and Invercargill Thistle.",
"1992 Chatham Cup\n * Won on penalties by Mt. Roskill (4-3), Manurewa (7-6), and Western (6-5)",
"1954 Chatham Cup\n The 1954 Chatham Cup was the 27th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Onehunga (Auckland), Eastern Union (Gisborne), Moturoa (New Plymouth), Napier Rovers, (Hawkes Bay), Wanganui Settlers (Wanganui), Kiwi United (Manawatu), Stop Out (Lower Hutt/Wellington), Woodbourne (Marlborough), Western (Christchurch), Northern (Dunedin), Brigadiers (Southland), Mangakino (Bay of Plenty), Millerton Thistle (Buller/West Coast).",
"1949 Chatham Cup\n The 1949 Chatham Cup was the 22nd annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds. Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included: Eden AFC (Auckland), Hamilton Wanderers, Rotowaro Tigers (Waikato), Moturoa AFC (New Plymouth), Ohakea (Manawatu), Petone Settlers, Waterside (Wellington), Wigram, Technical Old Boys, Nomads (Christchurch), Northern AFC, Green Island FC (Dunedin), Stockton (West Coast) and Invercargill Thistle (Southland).",
"1931 Chatham Cup\n The 1931 Chatham Cup was the ninth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with six regional associations (Auckland, Walkato, Wellington, Manawatu, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. In all, 30 teams took part in the competition, though some reports suggest there may have been 31 teams, and for the first time the majority came from the South Island. This was an improvements over previous years, but still a tiny number considering that 514 teams were affiliated to the regional associations nationwide. Participation by Auckland teams was particularly poor, with only three sides from that city taking part.",
"September 2011 in sports\nWorld Cup in New Zealand: ; Pool A in Auckland: 47–21 ; Pool B: ; In Invercargill: 34–24 ; In Dunedin: 9–13 ; Pool D in Rotorua: 49–25 ",
"2012 Chatham Cup\n Won 6-1 by Central United over Lower Hutt City",
"1932 Chatham Cup\n The 1932 Chatham Cup was the tenth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand. The competition was run on a regional basis, with seven regional associations (Auckland, Walkato, Wellington, Manawatu, Buller, Canterbury, and Otago) each holding separate qualifying rounds. The Westland Association also ran qualifying finals. Taylorville were beaten by Dobson 5 - 1. Runanga and Cobden had to play two replays of the second Westland - Chatham Cup semi-final after the first result, a 4 - 2 victory for Runanga was protested by Cobden. The first replay was played at Dunollie where the large, raucous crowd eventually spilled on to the ground after a fight between two players with one spectator striking the referee. The "
] |
What sport does Maltese Women's Cup play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Maltese Women's Cup | 2,266,361 | 76 | [
{
"id": "31247286",
"title": "Maltese Women's Cup",
"text": " The Maltese Women's Knock-Out is the annual cup competition for women's football teams in Malta. Established in 1995–96, the competition is organised by the Malta Football Association.",
"score": "1.8082991"
},
{
"id": "5601325",
"title": "Sport in Malta",
"text": " Malta has a first division for women's volleyball teams. The president of the national federation MVA has been Jesmond Saliba.",
"score": "1.752277"
},
{
"id": "30369112",
"title": "Maltese Women's League",
"text": " The Maltese Women's League or for sponsorship reasons BOV Women's League is the top-level league of women's football in Malta. It is run by the Malta Football Association. After several failed attempts in the 1970s and 1980s to create a lasting women's football competition, successful tournaments of San Gwann and Luxol St. Andrews gained so much interest, that the Malta Football Association decided to organize the first ever league in 1995–96. The most titles were won by Hibernians. Although the winning team of the league qualifies for a spot in the UEFA Women's Champions League, the spot is not always taken. Malta currently sits at the last spot in the UEFA coefficients women's ranking and the last club to take part was Birkirkara in 2007–08; Birkirkana lost all three games with 1–37 goals. In 09–10 they competed again and ended up with three losses and 1-26 goals.",
"score": "1.7357554"
},
{
"id": "30369113",
"title": "Maltese Women's League",
"text": " The 2020–21 season was played by the following teams.",
"score": "1.6791488"
},
{
"id": "5601328",
"title": "Sport in Malta",
"text": " Maltese National Hockey League is the official field hockey league in Malta, with 5 teams participating.",
"score": "1.6605139"
},
{
"id": "28912080",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": " The Malta women's national football team represents the Malta Football Association in international women's football matches sanctioned by UEFA.",
"score": "1.6540755"
},
{
"id": "28912081",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": " The team first appeared in official competitions in the 2005 European Championship's qualifying, debuting on August 10, 2003 in Bucharest with a 3–0 loss to Romania. Malta lost all eight games, scoring once and conceding 35. The team's first goal was scored by Sarah Caruana on November 16, 2003, against Croatia. After 13 losses, Malta achieved its first draw on June 7, 2006 against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the last match of the 2007 World Cup's qualifying. The team played in the 2011 World Cup's qualifying, losing all games including a record 0–13 defeat to Spain. On March 3, 2011 Malta won an official match for the first time in the 2013 European Championship qualifying's preliminary round, beating Georgia 1–0 with a goal by D'Agostino in injury time. On April 6, 2013 Malta beat Luxembourg 6–0 in the 2015 World Cup qualifying's preliminary round. The team also defeated Latvia and drew with Albania to top the group and make it past a preliminary round for the first time. The team was coached from its foundation until 2015 by Pierre Brincat, and then from 22 January 2015 till now by former U19 coach Mark Gatt.",
"score": "1.6509084"
},
{
"id": "12156141",
"title": "Birkirkara F.C. (women)",
"text": " Birkirkara F.C. is the women's team of the Maltese football club Birkirkara F.C., based in Birkirkara, Malta. As of 2019–20, they are the ninth-time champions of the Maltese First Division.",
"score": "1.6276805"
},
{
"id": "5601324",
"title": "Sport in Malta",
"text": " In 2020, Malta got its first-ever female head coach leading a men’s Division One basketball team. It was Silvia Gambino who started the position at Mellieħa SC Libertas.",
"score": "1.6268579"
},
{
"id": "3529630",
"title": "Hibernians F.C.",
"text": " A women's team plays in the Women's Maltese First Division. The team is the national record champion with twelve titles, the most recent being won in 2016.",
"score": "1.6052542"
},
{
"id": "28912082",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": " The Malta women's national team play their home matches on the Centenary Stadium.",
"score": "1.6051979"
},
{
"id": "28505425",
"title": "List of women's association football clubs",
"text": "Birkirkara (8) DC ; Kirkop United ; Mosta (1) ; Mġarr United ; Mtarfa ; Raiders Luxol ; Swieqi United Main League: Maltese First Division (women)",
"score": "1.6016412"
},
{
"id": "28912085",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": "Mark Gatt (????–) ",
"score": "1.5979905"
},
{
"id": "4311129",
"title": "Malta at the 2014 Commonwealth Games",
"text": "Women ",
"score": "1.5905747"
},
{
"id": "28912092",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": "*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. ",
"score": "1.5890738"
},
{
"id": "28912091",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": "*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. ",
"score": "1.5890738"
},
{
"id": "28912089",
"title": "Malta women's national football team",
"text": "*Active players in bold, statistics correct as of July 2021. ",
"score": "1.588184"
},
{
"id": "7361025",
"title": "Swieqi United F.C.",
"text": " BOV Women's Fair Play Award: Winners (2014–15) – MFA Under 15 League: Winners (2019-20) - FMA Futsal Elite Division: Runners-up (2020-21) – FMA Futsal Fair Play Award: Winners (2014–15) (i) MFPA (Malta Football Players Association) Special Award: Winners (2016–17) (ii) MFA (Malta Football Association) Fair Play Award: Winners (2016–17) (iii) MFA (Malta Football Association) Roderick Taliana: Nomination for BOV 2nd Div. Player of the year 2017–18 (iv) BOV Women's 2nd Division Top Scorer: Emma Moore (2016–17) (v) Youth League Section D Top Scorer: Nicholas Schembri – 21 goals (2016–17) (vi) YFA U15 Top Scorer: Daniele Ferlaino (2016–17) (vii) IASC Good Conduct Shield Winners: 2016–17",
"score": "1.5879145"
},
{
"id": "33118559",
"title": "2021 Malta International Women's Football Tournament",
"text": " The 2021 Malta International Women's Football Tournament also named VisitMalta Women's Tournament 2021 was the first edition of the Malta International Tournament, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Malta. It is scheduled to take place between 18 and 23 February in Paola.",
"score": "1.586535"
},
{
"id": "25308284",
"title": "Maltese National Hockey League",
"text": " The 9-a-side hockey league takes place annually during the first half of the hockey season. Primarily intended for reserve players, the rules of a match are unchanged from a typical 11-a-side games (except each team fields 9 players). The champions of the 2020/21 season were Sliema Hotsticks.",
"score": "1.5853925"
}
] | [
"Maltese Women's Cup\n The Maltese Women's Knock-Out is the annual cup competition for women's football teams in Malta. Established in 1995–96, the competition is organised by the Malta Football Association.",
"Sport in Malta\n Malta has a first division for women's volleyball teams. The president of the national federation MVA has been Jesmond Saliba.",
"Maltese Women's League\n The Maltese Women's League or for sponsorship reasons BOV Women's League is the top-level league of women's football in Malta. It is run by the Malta Football Association. After several failed attempts in the 1970s and 1980s to create a lasting women's football competition, successful tournaments of San Gwann and Luxol St. Andrews gained so much interest, that the Malta Football Association decided to organize the first ever league in 1995–96. The most titles were won by Hibernians. Although the winning team of the league qualifies for a spot in the UEFA Women's Champions League, the spot is not always taken. Malta currently sits at the last spot in the UEFA coefficients women's ranking and the last club to take part was Birkirkara in 2007–08; Birkirkana lost all three games with 1–37 goals. In 09–10 they competed again and ended up with three losses and 1-26 goals.",
"Maltese Women's League\n The 2020–21 season was played by the following teams.",
"Sport in Malta\n Maltese National Hockey League is the official field hockey league in Malta, with 5 teams participating.",
"Malta women's national football team\n The Malta women's national football team represents the Malta Football Association in international women's football matches sanctioned by UEFA.",
"Malta women's national football team\n The team first appeared in official competitions in the 2005 European Championship's qualifying, debuting on August 10, 2003 in Bucharest with a 3–0 loss to Romania. Malta lost all eight games, scoring once and conceding 35. The team's first goal was scored by Sarah Caruana on November 16, 2003, against Croatia. After 13 losses, Malta achieved its first draw on June 7, 2006 against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the last match of the 2007 World Cup's qualifying. The team played in the 2011 World Cup's qualifying, losing all games including a record 0–13 defeat to Spain. On March 3, 2011 Malta won an official match for the first time in the 2013 European Championship qualifying's preliminary round, beating Georgia 1–0 with a goal by D'Agostino in injury time. On April 6, 2013 Malta beat Luxembourg 6–0 in the 2015 World Cup qualifying's preliminary round. The team also defeated Latvia and drew with Albania to top the group and make it past a preliminary round for the first time. The team was coached from its foundation until 2015 by Pierre Brincat, and then from 22 January 2015 till now by former U19 coach Mark Gatt.",
"Birkirkara F.C. (women)\n Birkirkara F.C. is the women's team of the Maltese football club Birkirkara F.C., based in Birkirkara, Malta. As of 2019–20, they are the ninth-time champions of the Maltese First Division.",
"Sport in Malta\n In 2020, Malta got its first-ever female head coach leading a men’s Division One basketball team. It was Silvia Gambino who started the position at Mellieħa SC Libertas.",
"Hibernians F.C.\n A women's team plays in the Women's Maltese First Division. The team is the national record champion with twelve titles, the most recent being won in 2016.",
"Malta women's national football team\n The Malta women's national team play their home matches on the Centenary Stadium.",
"List of women's association football clubs\nBirkirkara (8) DC ; Kirkop United ; Mosta (1) ; Mġarr United ; Mtarfa ; Raiders Luxol ; Swieqi United Main League: Maltese First Division (women)",
"Malta women's national football team\nMark Gatt (????–) ",
"Malta at the 2014 Commonwealth Games\nWomen ",
"Malta women's national football team\n*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. ",
"Malta women's national football team\n*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. ",
"Malta women's national football team\n*Active players in bold, statistics correct as of July 2021. ",
"Swieqi United F.C.\n BOV Women's Fair Play Award: Winners (2014–15) – MFA Under 15 League: Winners (2019-20) - FMA Futsal Elite Division: Runners-up (2020-21) – FMA Futsal Fair Play Award: Winners (2014–15) (i) MFPA (Malta Football Players Association) Special Award: Winners (2016–17) (ii) MFA (Malta Football Association) Fair Play Award: Winners (2016–17) (iii) MFA (Malta Football Association) Roderick Taliana: Nomination for BOV 2nd Div. Player of the year 2017–18 (iv) BOV Women's 2nd Division Top Scorer: Emma Moore (2016–17) (v) Youth League Section D Top Scorer: Nicholas Schembri – 21 goals (2016–17) (vi) YFA U15 Top Scorer: Daniele Ferlaino (2016–17) (vii) IASC Good Conduct Shield Winners: 2016–17",
"2021 Malta International Women's Football Tournament\n The 2021 Malta International Women's Football Tournament also named VisitMalta Women's Tournament 2021 was the first edition of the Malta International Tournament, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Malta. It is scheduled to take place between 18 and 23 February in Paola.",
"Maltese National Hockey League\n The 9-a-side hockey league takes place annually during the first half of the hockey season. Primarily intended for reserve players, the rules of a match are unchanged from a typical 11-a-side games (except each team fields 9 players). The champions of the 2020/21 season were Sliema Hotsticks."
] |
What sport does 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament play? | [
"baseball",
"America's pastime",
"⚾"
] | sport | 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament | 3,169,042 | 88 | [
{
"id": "4055204",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 20 through May 24. It was the first time the tournament has been played at the ballpark since 1999 and fourth time overall since the ballpark opened in 1995. The #6 seeded Virginia Cavaliers won the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's first conference championship in baseball since 1996, and their second tournament championship ever. The tournament was originally scheduled to be contested at Fenway Park in Boston, home of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox. But on August 14, 2008, it was announced by Fenway Sports Group, along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, that the location of the tournament would have to be changed due to a scheduling error. The ACC chose the Bulls' ballpark as Fenway's replacement. 2009 was the third year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.817781"
},
{
"id": "9202865",
"title": "2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 25 through May 29. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Top seeded Virginia won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's third ACC tournament win and second in three years. 2011 was the fifth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.769047"
},
{
"id": "4863460",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 26 through May 30. The #5 seeded Florida State Seminoles won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2010 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Florida State's fifth ACC tournament win and first since 2004. A record 6,247 were in attendance for the championship game. 2010 was the fourth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.7603204"
},
{
"id": "12740626",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " In 2004, the conference expanded to 11 teams with the addition of Miami and Virginia Tech. Beginning with the 2005 Baseball Tournament, the tournament switched from a true eight-team double-elimination to two four-team double-elimination brackets with winner of each side playing in a winner-take-all championship game. The bottom four teams in conference play faced off in a single-elimination bracket, with the winner earning the #8 spot in the tournament.",
"score": "1.7427143"
},
{
"id": "4055208",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " (*)Denotes Unanimous Selection",
"score": "1.7396122"
},
{
"id": "4055205",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"score": "1.7393949"
},
{
"id": "12740628",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " See Example: 2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament Beginning in 2007, the ACC developed a new tournament format that eliminated the brackets altogether. This new format was a two-group, four-team round robin tournament with the winner of each grouping playing in a winner-take-all championship game. Only the top eight teams in the regular season conference standings were invited to play in the tournament. On July 6, 2009, the Atlantic Coast Conference announced a decision to move three future baseball tournaments out of Myrtle Beach, citing miscommunications with the NAACP concerning the display of the Confederate flag in South Carolina. (Charlotte was included in the NAACP Boycott because Knights Stadium was in York County, South Carolina, less than five kilometers from the state line.) The 2010 ACC tournament was initially scheduled to take place at Fenway Park, but cost-containment for schools (most of whom would have to fly to Boston) was cited for moving the tournament to Greensboro.",
"score": "1.7388786"
},
{
"id": "4055206",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to Mercy Rule 1 - Florida State beat Boston College head-to-head",
"score": "1.7342529"
},
{
"id": "4863462",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to mercy rule 1 - Florida State beat Virginia head-to-head 2 - NC State beat Virginia Tech head-to-head",
"score": "1.7307787"
},
{
"id": "12739930",
"title": "2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Florida from May 21 through May 25. The #1 seeded University of Miami won the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Miami's first conference championship in baseball after having played as an independent until joining the ACC during the 2004-05 academic year. 2008 was the second year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.7258755"
},
{
"id": "13641992",
"title": "2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 23 through May 27. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Eighth seeded Georgia Tech won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2012 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Georgia Tech's eighth ACC tournament win. This was the first time in which an eighth seeded team won the tournament.",
"score": "1.7078784"
},
{
"id": "4966923",
"title": "2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 20 through May 25 at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. won their ninth tournament championship to earn the league's automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2013–14 academic year. With the victory, Georgia Tech tied Clemson for the most tournament championships. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson and Georgia Tech now tied for the most championships, each winning nine. Charter league members Duke and Maryland, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech and Boston College have never won the event. Pittsburgh and Notre Dame played their first season in the ACC in 2014.",
"score": "1.7009877"
},
{
"id": "12740624",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " With the introduction of Florida State into the ACC to bring the total teams to nine, the baseball tournament added a Play-In game where the bottom two teams in the conference regular season standings played in a winner-takes-all game for the 8th spot in the regular tournament.",
"score": "1.6994898"
},
{
"id": "12739931",
"title": "2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Boston College, Duke, Maryland and Virginia Tech did not make the tournament. From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions. ",
"score": "1.6960492"
},
{
"id": "4976973",
"title": "2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 20–23 at Fifth Third Field in Dayton, OH. It featured the top six regular-season finishers of the conference's 14 teams. Third-seeded Xavier defeated Rhode Island in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the A-10's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Tournament.",
"score": "1.6955402"
},
{
"id": "6014124",
"title": "2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 27 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion receives the league's automatic bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2017–18 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and Florida State has won seven titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame have never won the event. Louisville plays their third season in the ACC in 2017, and has also yet to win a title. Florida State defeated Louisville in the championship game to win the tournament for the eighth time overall, and the third time in four seasons.",
"score": "1.6911455"
},
{
"id": "4055207",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " 1 - Game ended in the bottom of the eighth inning due to the Mercy Rule.",
"score": "1.6898232"
},
{
"id": "4863461",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"score": "1.6890708"
},
{
"id": "12082768",
"title": "2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Florida State and North Carolina were Regular Season Division Champs ; Wake Forest held the tie-breaker over Clemson by defeating them head-to-head 3-2 ; North Carolina held the tie-breaker over Virginia by defeating them head-to-head 5-0 ",
"score": "1.6784737"
},
{
"id": "1144559",
"title": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion, North Carolina, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2018–19 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and defending champion Florida State has won eight titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Louisville have never won the event.",
"score": "1.6713126"
}
] | [
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 20 through May 24. It was the first time the tournament has been played at the ballpark since 1999 and fourth time overall since the ballpark opened in 1995. The #6 seeded Virginia Cavaliers won the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's first conference championship in baseball since 1996, and their second tournament championship ever. The tournament was originally scheduled to be contested at Fenway Park in Boston, home of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox. But on August 14, 2008, it was announced by Fenway Sports Group, along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, that the location of the tournament would have to be changed due to a scheduling error. The ACC chose the Bulls' ballpark as Fenway's replacement. 2009 was the third year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 25 through May 29. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Top seeded Virginia won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's third ACC tournament win and second in three years. 2011 was the fifth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 26 through May 30. The #5 seeded Florida State Seminoles won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2010 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Florida State's fifth ACC tournament win and first since 2004. A record 6,247 were in attendance for the championship game. 2010 was the fourth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n In 2004, the conference expanded to 11 teams with the addition of Miami and Virginia Tech. Beginning with the 2005 Baseball Tournament, the tournament switched from a true eight-team double-elimination to two four-team double-elimination brackets with winner of each side playing in a winner-take-all championship game. The bottom four teams in conference play faced off in a single-elimination bracket, with the winner earning the #8 spot in the tournament.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n (*)Denotes Unanimous Selection",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n See Example: 2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament Beginning in 2007, the ACC developed a new tournament format that eliminated the brackets altogether. This new format was a two-group, four-team round robin tournament with the winner of each grouping playing in a winner-take-all championship game. Only the top eight teams in the regular season conference standings were invited to play in the tournament. On July 6, 2009, the Atlantic Coast Conference announced a decision to move three future baseball tournaments out of Myrtle Beach, citing miscommunications with the NAACP concerning the display of the Confederate flag in South Carolina. (Charlotte was included in the NAACP Boycott because Knights Stadium was in York County, South Carolina, less than five kilometers from the state line.) The 2010 ACC tournament was initially scheduled to take place at Fenway Park, but cost-containment for schools (most of whom would have to fly to Boston) was cited for moving the tournament to Greensboro.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to Mercy Rule 1 - Florida State beat Boston College head-to-head",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to mercy rule 1 - Florida State beat Virginia head-to-head 2 - NC State beat Virginia Tech head-to-head",
"2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Florida from May 21 through May 25. The #1 seeded University of Miami won the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Miami's first conference championship in baseball after having played as an independent until joining the ACC during the 2004-05 academic year. 2008 was the second year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 23 through May 27. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Eighth seeded Georgia Tech won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2012 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Georgia Tech's eighth ACC tournament win. This was the first time in which an eighth seeded team won the tournament.",
"2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 20 through May 25 at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. won their ninth tournament championship to earn the league's automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2013–14 academic year. With the victory, Georgia Tech tied Clemson for the most tournament championships. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson and Georgia Tech now tied for the most championships, each winning nine. Charter league members Duke and Maryland, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech and Boston College have never won the event. Pittsburgh and Notre Dame played their first season in the ACC in 2014.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n With the introduction of Florida State into the ACC to bring the total teams to nine, the baseball tournament added a Play-In game where the bottom two teams in the conference regular season standings played in a winner-takes-all game for the 8th spot in the regular tournament.",
"2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nBoston College, Duke, Maryland and Virginia Tech did not make the tournament. From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions. ",
"2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 20–23 at Fifth Third Field in Dayton, OH. It featured the top six regular-season finishers of the conference's 14 teams. Third-seeded Xavier defeated Rhode Island in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the A-10's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Tournament.",
"2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 27 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion receives the league's automatic bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2017–18 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and Florida State has won seven titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame have never won the event. Louisville plays their third season in the ACC in 2017, and has also yet to win a title. Florida State defeated Louisville in the championship game to win the tournament for the eighth time overall, and the third time in four seasons.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n 1 - Game ended in the bottom of the eighth inning due to the Mercy Rule.",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nFlorida State and North Carolina were Regular Season Division Champs ; Wake Forest held the tie-breaker over Clemson by defeating them head-to-head 3-2 ; North Carolina held the tie-breaker over Virginia by defeating them head-to-head 5-0 ",
"2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion, North Carolina, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2018–19 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and defending champion Florida State has won eight titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Louisville have never won the event."
] |
What sport does Timon Dobias play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Timon Dobias | 5,997,654 | 38 | [
{
"id": "379631",
"title": "Timon Dobias",
"text": " Timon Dobias (born 28 July 1989) is a retired Slovak football player.",
"score": "1.8546426"
},
{
"id": "379632",
"title": "Timon Dobias",
"text": " Dobias is a product of 1. FC Košice, later renamed to MFK, youth squads. He made his Corgoň Liga debut two days before his 19th birthday in a 1–0 away win against Dukla Banská Bystrica. He scored his first goal in a 1–0 home win against Dunajská Streda on 5 March 2011. On 31 July 2019 it was announced, that Dobias had decided to retire due to chronic health problems.",
"score": "1.6783817"
},
{
"id": "16468094",
"title": "Thobias Fredriksson",
"text": " Thobias Fredriksson (born 4 April 1975 in Dals Rostock, Dalsland) is a Swedish former cross-country skier who competed since 2000. He won two medals at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin with a gold in the team sprint and a bronze in the individual sprint events. Fredriksson also won two medals in the individual sprint events at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships with a gold in 2003 and a bronze in 2005. After the 2010 season, Fredriksson retired. Thobias has a brother, Mathias Fredriksson, at the same professional level.",
"score": "1.5272036"
},
{
"id": "32301028",
"title": "Steponas Garbačiauskas",
"text": " Steponas \"Stepas\" Garbačiauskas (17 April 1900 – 3 August 1983) was a Lithuanian record-holding athlete, football player, sports journalist, and diplomat. He is regarded as one of the Lithuanian sports pioneers. Garbačiauskas was a forward and captain of the first Lithuanian footballing international in 1923 against Estonia, the following year he played in the 1924 Summer Olympics, against Switzerland which they lost 0-9 and didn't advance any further, over the next couple of years he played four more ties for his country. Garbačiauskas was buried at the Petrašiūnai Cemetery.",
"score": "1.4902427"
},
{
"id": "11362307",
"title": "Tim Jenniskens",
"text": " Tim Jenniskens (born 23 September 1986 in Tilburg) is a Dutch field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he competed with the Netherlands national field hockey team in the men's tournament, winning a silver medal.",
"score": "1.4876442"
},
{
"id": "8441382",
"title": "Genrik Pavliukianec",
"text": " Genrik Pavliukianec (born 17 June 1976) is a Lithuanian goalball player, he was regarded as the best striker in world. He competed at the five Paralympic Games and has won three medals including a gold medal at the Games, he was also three-time European champion and a double World champion.",
"score": "1.470952"
},
{
"id": "15736372",
"title": "David Doblas",
"text": " In 2009, Doblas played in the NBA Summer League with the Toronto Raptors's Summer League team. On 30 September 2016, Doblas penned a contract with Doxa Lefkadas of the Greek Basket League. However, despite the announcement, on 1 October 2016, he played in the first Spanish 2nd Division game with the Basque team Araberri, scoring 8 points and grabbing 7 rebounds, in their 87–76 win against Tau Castelló, before joining the Greek team.",
"score": "1.4548467"
},
{
"id": "11234740",
"title": "Valters Āboliņš",
"text": " Valters Āboliņš (born 19 December 1985 in Dobele, Latvia) is a Latvian rogaining competitor and former football defender. He won a silver medal in the XO group at the 8th World Rogaining Championship in Karula National Park, Estonia. His teammates were Andris Ansabergs and Mara Leitane. He also spend two years in Latvia Second league football club Hemat.",
"score": "1.4327247"
},
{
"id": "14773971",
"title": "Mercer Timmis",
"text": " Timmis played CIS football for the Calgary Dinos from 2012 to 2015. In 2013, he broke the Canada West record for rushing touchdowns in a season (18), total touchdowns in a season (19), and was named the Canada West MVP. He scored the most touchdowns in Dinos history and was a three-time CIS first team All-Canadian. After the 2015 CIS season, he was ranked as the seventh best player in the Canadian Football League’s Amateur Scouting Bureau December rankings for players eligible in the 2016 CFL Draft and third by players in Canadian Interuniversity Sport.",
"score": "1.4305105"
},
{
"id": "6870229",
"title": "Karol Dobiaš",
"text": " He was born in Handlová. His career started in Baník Handlová. In 1965 he moved to Spartak Trnava where he achieved the biggest success as a player. With Spartak he became a five time Czechoslovakian champion and won three national cups. In 1970 and 1971, he was named Czechoslovak Footballer of the Year. In 1977, he moved to Bohemians Prague. During his career he played 345 matches in the Czechoslovak league and scored 20 goals. In 1980, he was allowed to be transferred abroad and he went to KSC Lokeren in Belgium. He ended his career in 1984 at Racing Gand. He was capped 67 times for Czechoslovakia, scored 6 goals. He was a participant at the 1970 FIFA World Cup and a member of Czechoslovak winning team at 1976 European Football Championship. In the 1976 final game Dobiaš scored a goal that gave Czechoslovakia a 2–0 lead against West Germany.",
"score": "1.4300823"
},
{
"id": "5704111",
"title": "Zachary Pangelinan",
"text": " Pangelinan played his club rugby for OMBAC. On January 9, 2013 he was awarded the RugbyMag.com Player of the Week prize for his match-winning performance against Los Angeles.",
"score": "1.4282639"
},
{
"id": "3448313",
"title": "Boriss Timofejevs",
"text": " Boriss Timofejevs (born September 4, 1957 in Riga) is a Latvian sport shooter. He competed in the 1992, 1996, and 2000 Summer Olympics. At the 1992 Olympics, he tied for 11th place in the skeet event. At the 1996 Olympics, he placed 6th in the men's skeet event. At the 2000 Olympics, he tied for 12th place in the men's skeet event.",
"score": "1.4219742"
},
{
"id": "2609307",
"title": "Șerban Doboși",
"text": " A graduate of the Cluj Sports Academy, he is, as of 2014, a professor at the Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport, and holds leading posts at the Romanian Table Tennis Federation.",
"score": "1.4203805"
},
{
"id": "26997867",
"title": "Dovis Bičkauskis",
"text": " Bičkauskis won gold medal with the Lithuanian team during the 2017 Summer Universiade after defeating the United States' team 74–85 in the final. He was also invited to the Lithuania men's national basketball team to play in the FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification in 2019.",
"score": "1.4197849"
},
{
"id": "10748763",
"title": "Tim Hutten",
"text": " Tim Hutten (born June 4, 1985) is an American water polo player. He is a member of the United States men's national water polo team at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. In the championship game, the USA team won the silver medal, losing to Hungary. He also competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Hutten played college water polo at the University of California, Irvine.",
"score": "1.4174597"
},
{
"id": "13784512",
"title": "Stelios Halkias",
"text": " He has represented his country in a number of Chess Olympiads, including 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2012. He played in the Chess World Cup 2011, losing to Alexander Morozevich in the first round.",
"score": "1.4170641"
},
{
"id": "8018632",
"title": "Justas Pažarauskas",
"text": " Justas Pažarauskas (born 1991) is a Lithuanian goalball player who competes in international elite competitions. He is a Paralympic champion, World Games champion and European champion.",
"score": "1.4160829"
},
{
"id": "918241",
"title": "Peter Rasmusen",
"text": " Peter Chris Rasmusen (born 30 October 1980) is an American-Greek former baseball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics. He played one minor league season for the High Desert Mavericks, the High-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers at the time. He was an All-American at Triton College in 1999-2000. He hit the game winning home run for Stetson University in their upset of #3 ranked Georgia Tech in the Atlanta Regional of the College World Series in 2003. Pete is now a North Central Region CrossFit Games athlete for Team CrossFit Carbon. He also owns a CrossFit Carbon in Vernon Hills, Illinois where he coaches as well.",
"score": "1.414819"
},
{
"id": "25704677",
"title": "Tim Landeryou",
"text": " bronze medals for Canada. In the 2011-12 National Team Selection Events, Landeryou finished 4th in Oakville, Ontario, where he lost in the semi-finals to Mike Green, 15–7, 15–3, and then lost in the 3rd place match to Kris Odegard, 15–4, 15–6. He was 3rd at the second selection event, as he lost to Odegard in the semi-finals in Regina, 15–11, 15–7, and won the 3rd place match, beating Nathaniel Husulak, 15–8, 15–9. At the 2012 Pan American Racquetball Championships, Landeryou played doubles with Nathaniel Husulak, losing in the quarter finals to Mexicans Alejandro Cardona and Edson Martinez. At the 2012 Canadian ",
"score": "1.4145626"
},
{
"id": "16055983",
"title": "Lambros Athanassoulas",
"text": " Impreza. For the 2009 Acropolis Rally, Athanassoulas competed in a Škoda Fabia S2000, winning the PWRC class and finishing eighth overall. He followed this by winning his class on the 2009 Rally Catalunya on the debut of the new Ford Fiesta R2. He was named Greek Athlete of the Year at the end of 2009 by Status magazine. Athanssoulas' first start in the highest class was the 2011 Acropolis Rally, when he presented strong pace, but due to retirement on the first leg and returning later under Rally2 rules classified only 19th. He returned to rallying in 2015 with the Skoda Fabia R5 and scored 3rd place in that year's Acropolis Rally, losing only to title contestants Kajetan Kajetanowicz and Craig Breen, he also led the rally at one point. In 2016, ",
"score": "1.4127016"
}
] | [
"Timon Dobias\n Timon Dobias (born 28 July 1989) is a retired Slovak football player.",
"Timon Dobias\n Dobias is a product of 1. FC Košice, later renamed to MFK, youth squads. He made his Corgoň Liga debut two days before his 19th birthday in a 1–0 away win against Dukla Banská Bystrica. He scored his first goal in a 1–0 home win against Dunajská Streda on 5 March 2011. On 31 July 2019 it was announced, that Dobias had decided to retire due to chronic health problems.",
"Thobias Fredriksson\n Thobias Fredriksson (born 4 April 1975 in Dals Rostock, Dalsland) is a Swedish former cross-country skier who competed since 2000. He won two medals at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin with a gold in the team sprint and a bronze in the individual sprint events. Fredriksson also won two medals in the individual sprint events at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships with a gold in 2003 and a bronze in 2005. After the 2010 season, Fredriksson retired. Thobias has a brother, Mathias Fredriksson, at the same professional level.",
"Steponas Garbačiauskas\n Steponas \"Stepas\" Garbačiauskas (17 April 1900 – 3 August 1983) was a Lithuanian record-holding athlete, football player, sports journalist, and diplomat. He is regarded as one of the Lithuanian sports pioneers. Garbačiauskas was a forward and captain of the first Lithuanian footballing international in 1923 against Estonia, the following year he played in the 1924 Summer Olympics, against Switzerland which they lost 0-9 and didn't advance any further, over the next couple of years he played four more ties for his country. Garbačiauskas was buried at the Petrašiūnai Cemetery.",
"Tim Jenniskens\n Tim Jenniskens (born 23 September 1986 in Tilburg) is a Dutch field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he competed with the Netherlands national field hockey team in the men's tournament, winning a silver medal.",
"Genrik Pavliukianec\n Genrik Pavliukianec (born 17 June 1976) is a Lithuanian goalball player, he was regarded as the best striker in world. He competed at the five Paralympic Games and has won three medals including a gold medal at the Games, he was also three-time European champion and a double World champion.",
"David Doblas\n In 2009, Doblas played in the NBA Summer League with the Toronto Raptors's Summer League team. On 30 September 2016, Doblas penned a contract with Doxa Lefkadas of the Greek Basket League. However, despite the announcement, on 1 October 2016, he played in the first Spanish 2nd Division game with the Basque team Araberri, scoring 8 points and grabbing 7 rebounds, in their 87–76 win against Tau Castelló, before joining the Greek team.",
"Valters Āboliņš\n Valters Āboliņš (born 19 December 1985 in Dobele, Latvia) is a Latvian rogaining competitor and former football defender. He won a silver medal in the XO group at the 8th World Rogaining Championship in Karula National Park, Estonia. His teammates were Andris Ansabergs and Mara Leitane. He also spend two years in Latvia Second league football club Hemat.",
"Mercer Timmis\n Timmis played CIS football for the Calgary Dinos from 2012 to 2015. In 2013, he broke the Canada West record for rushing touchdowns in a season (18), total touchdowns in a season (19), and was named the Canada West MVP. He scored the most touchdowns in Dinos history and was a three-time CIS first team All-Canadian. After the 2015 CIS season, he was ranked as the seventh best player in the Canadian Football League’s Amateur Scouting Bureau December rankings for players eligible in the 2016 CFL Draft and third by players in Canadian Interuniversity Sport.",
"Karol Dobiaš\n He was born in Handlová. His career started in Baník Handlová. In 1965 he moved to Spartak Trnava where he achieved the biggest success as a player. With Spartak he became a five time Czechoslovakian champion and won three national cups. In 1970 and 1971, he was named Czechoslovak Footballer of the Year. In 1977, he moved to Bohemians Prague. During his career he played 345 matches in the Czechoslovak league and scored 20 goals. In 1980, he was allowed to be transferred abroad and he went to KSC Lokeren in Belgium. He ended his career in 1984 at Racing Gand. He was capped 67 times for Czechoslovakia, scored 6 goals. He was a participant at the 1970 FIFA World Cup and a member of Czechoslovak winning team at 1976 European Football Championship. In the 1976 final game Dobiaš scored a goal that gave Czechoslovakia a 2–0 lead against West Germany.",
"Zachary Pangelinan\n Pangelinan played his club rugby for OMBAC. On January 9, 2013 he was awarded the RugbyMag.com Player of the Week prize for his match-winning performance against Los Angeles.",
"Boriss Timofejevs\n Boriss Timofejevs (born September 4, 1957 in Riga) is a Latvian sport shooter. He competed in the 1992, 1996, and 2000 Summer Olympics. At the 1992 Olympics, he tied for 11th place in the skeet event. At the 1996 Olympics, he placed 6th in the men's skeet event. At the 2000 Olympics, he tied for 12th place in the men's skeet event.",
"Șerban Doboși\n A graduate of the Cluj Sports Academy, he is, as of 2014, a professor at the Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport, and holds leading posts at the Romanian Table Tennis Federation.",
"Dovis Bičkauskis\n Bičkauskis won gold medal with the Lithuanian team during the 2017 Summer Universiade after defeating the United States' team 74–85 in the final. He was also invited to the Lithuania men's national basketball team to play in the FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification in 2019.",
"Tim Hutten\n Tim Hutten (born June 4, 1985) is an American water polo player. He is a member of the United States men's national water polo team at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. In the championship game, the USA team won the silver medal, losing to Hungary. He also competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Hutten played college water polo at the University of California, Irvine.",
"Stelios Halkias\n He has represented his country in a number of Chess Olympiads, including 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2012. He played in the Chess World Cup 2011, losing to Alexander Morozevich in the first round.",
"Justas Pažarauskas\n Justas Pažarauskas (born 1991) is a Lithuanian goalball player who competes in international elite competitions. He is a Paralympic champion, World Games champion and European champion.",
"Peter Rasmusen\n Peter Chris Rasmusen (born 30 October 1980) is an American-Greek former baseball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics. He played one minor league season for the High Desert Mavericks, the High-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers at the time. He was an All-American at Triton College in 1999-2000. He hit the game winning home run for Stetson University in their upset of #3 ranked Georgia Tech in the Atlanta Regional of the College World Series in 2003. Pete is now a North Central Region CrossFit Games athlete for Team CrossFit Carbon. He also owns a CrossFit Carbon in Vernon Hills, Illinois where he coaches as well.",
"Tim Landeryou\n bronze medals for Canada. In the 2011-12 National Team Selection Events, Landeryou finished 4th in Oakville, Ontario, where he lost in the semi-finals to Mike Green, 15–7, 15–3, and then lost in the 3rd place match to Kris Odegard, 15–4, 15–6. He was 3rd at the second selection event, as he lost to Odegard in the semi-finals in Regina, 15–11, 15–7, and won the 3rd place match, beating Nathaniel Husulak, 15–8, 15–9. At the 2012 Pan American Racquetball Championships, Landeryou played doubles with Nathaniel Husulak, losing in the quarter finals to Mexicans Alejandro Cardona and Edson Martinez. At the 2012 Canadian ",
"Lambros Athanassoulas\n Impreza. For the 2009 Acropolis Rally, Athanassoulas competed in a Škoda Fabia S2000, winning the PWRC class and finishing eighth overall. He followed this by winning his class on the 2009 Rally Catalunya on the debut of the new Ford Fiesta R2. He was named Greek Athlete of the Year at the end of 2009 by Status magazine. Athanssoulas' first start in the highest class was the 2011 Acropolis Rally, when he presented strong pace, but due to retirement on the first leg and returning later under Rally2 rules classified only 19th. He returned to rallying in 2015 with the Skoda Fabia R5 and scored 3rd place in that year's Acropolis Rally, losing only to title contestants Kajetan Kajetanowicz and Craig Breen, he also led the rally at one point. In 2016, "
] |
What sport does Mutanda Kwesele play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Mutanda Kwesele | 72,202 | 84 | [
{
"id": "4835142",
"title": "Mutanda Kwesele",
"text": " Mutanda has coached for several Seattle-area clubs, organizations and schools. He is currently a coach with Emerald City Football Club, and has coached for Rainier Beach High School. Mutanda is also founder of The Rising Point, a non-profit organization designed to bring quality soccer programs to underserved communities.",
"score": "1.9838724"
},
{
"id": "4835139",
"title": "Mutanda Kwesele",
"text": " Mutanda Kwesele (born March 14, 1986 in Mufulira) is a Zambian footballer.",
"score": "1.9752847"
},
{
"id": "4835140",
"title": "Mutanda Kwesele",
"text": " Kwesele moved from his native Zambia to the United States with his family as a child, settling in Seattle, Washington. He attended Seattle Preparatory School, where he was a two-time All-Metro and All-District selection, and began his college soccer at Santa Clara University. He transferred to Seattle University prior to his sophomore season in 2006, and played three seasons with the Redhawks, helping the team reach the NCAA tournament in back-to-back seasons in 2006 and 2007. He played in 42 games during his college career, recording two goals and five assists. During his college years Kwesele also played with the Tacoma Tide in the USL Premier Development League in 2007, playing in 10 games and scoring 1 goal.",
"score": "1.9714261"
},
{
"id": "9166037",
"title": "Mumbi Kwesele",
"text": " Mumbi's brother is Mutanda Kwesele, who also played professional soccer.",
"score": "1.8374162"
},
{
"id": "4835141",
"title": "Mutanda Kwesele",
"text": " Undrafted out of college, Kwesele was unable to secure a professional contract, and signed instead to play with the Portland Timbers U23s in the USL Premier Development League in 2009. He signed his first professional contract in 2011 when he signed with FC Edmonton of the North American Soccer League. He made his debut for Edmonton on May 4, 2011, in a 1-0 loss to Toronto FC in the 2011 Nutrilite Canadian Championship. The club released Kwesele on October 12, 2011 after the conclusion of the 2011 season.",
"score": "1.832308"
},
{
"id": "9166035",
"title": "Mumbi Kwesele",
"text": " Kwesele attended Barry University in 2015, where he played for two seasons. He transferred to Humboldt State University where he played during their 2016 and 2017 seasons.",
"score": "1.7310529"
},
{
"id": "9166034",
"title": "Mumbi Kwesele",
"text": " Mumbi Kwesele (born February 26, 1995) is an American soccer player who plays as a midfielder for Richmond Kickers in the USL League One.",
"score": "1.6848319"
},
{
"id": "8534147",
"title": "Godfrey Chitalu",
"text": " teammates Lameck Soko, Stephen Musonda and Winston Muamba. During his 3 years at the centre, Kwacha I remained champions in Kitwe District. Chitalu's talent was noticed by a club trainer called Tirivavi, who encouraged him to concentrate on playing football and forget about boxing so he hung up his gloves conditioned too by the fact that not many boys of his age were interested in the sport. In 1961, he completed his primary education and left Kitwe. He went to stay with his elder brother Stanley in Chingola and continued his studies at Mushishima Secondary School and played for the school ",
"score": "1.6764295"
},
{
"id": "2122177",
"title": "Kwesé Sports",
"text": " Kwesé Sports was a sport website serving Sub-Saharan Africa operated by Econet Media, a subsidiary of Econet Wireless. Kwesé Sports was launched on 4 December 2015 with the announcement made by Econet Wireless founder Strive Masiyiwa, on the social networking site Facebook.",
"score": "1.5776017"
},
{
"id": "12611956",
"title": "Rachael Muema",
"text": " At age 7, Rachael started playing football with village boys in Kitui County. She was later on selected to represent Mutanda Primary School in the national ball games. She continued playing football when she joined Nginda Girls High School, where she was later made captain and led the school in many inter-school games, including national and East African high school competitions. Muema's role model is Doreen Nabwire and inspired by the former Kenyan international's football journey and her record of being the first Kenyan woman to play professional football in Europe as her dream is to play in Europe.",
"score": "1.5282352"
},
{
"id": "30616784",
"title": "Junior Kwebiha",
"text": " Kwebiha first played for Uganda in 2001, at the 2001 ICC Trophy in Canada. He made his first-class debut in 2004, playing against Namibia and Kenya in the ICC Intercontinental Cup. He also played a match in the 2005 tournament against Namibia. He made his List A debut in 2005, playing in the 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland. He has continued in the Ugandan team, playing matches against Bermuda and Canada in January 2007, before representing Uganda in Division Three of the World Cricket League later in the year, a tournament that Uganda won. He won the man of the match award in Uganda's match against the Cayman Islands after taking 4/11 in the Cayman Islands innings.",
"score": "1.5184982"
},
{
"id": "27642055",
"title": "Athletics at the All-Africa University Games",
"text": "1979: 🇰🇪 James Munyala (KEN) ",
"score": "1.5177295"
},
{
"id": "2878907",
"title": "Dikembe Mutombo",
"text": " 2009 season and was named Southern Conference Freshman of the Year. His nephew Haboubacar Mutombo also committed to play basketball at Western Carolina beginning in 2013. His nephew Mfiondu Kabengele played college basketball at Florida State University and was the 2018–19 ACC Sixth Man of the Year. He later was drafted in the first round of the 2019 NBA draft and signed a playing contract with the Los Angeles Clippers. Mutombo was among those who witnessed the 2016 Brussels bombings at Brussels Airport on March 22, 2016. Shortly after the bombings, he posted a report on his Facebook page saying that he was safe. His first post said, \"God is good. I am in the Brussels Airport with this craziness. I am fine.\"",
"score": "1.5170491"
},
{
"id": "28359621",
"title": "Itumeleng Khune",
"text": " Khune was born in Tshing, Ventersdorp in the North West as one of six children of Elias and Flora Khune. He is of Tswana heritage. His father Elias, worked as a driver at a mine in Carletonville and also played amateur football as a striker. Unlike many South African players who cite kicking a football on their hometown's dusty streets as their starting point, Khune was in love with cricket idolising Nicky Boje. He eventually decided to pursue a career in football to earn a living for him and his family. He attended New Nation, Westridge, St Barnabas and RW Fick High Schools. His younger brother Lucky Khune previously played as a striker for Chiefs and currently for PSL side Chippa United. Khune is nicknamed \"Spider-Man\" for his reflexes and flexible goalkeeping skills. In 2019 Khune and his wife Sphelele Makhunga got married traditionally.",
"score": "1.5099614"
},
{
"id": "27925158",
"title": "Charly Musonda (footballer, born 1969)",
"text": " His debut as a professional for Zambia came in 1988 against Ghana in Lusaka which Zambia won 2–0 and Musonda did not disappoint, tellingly imposing himself on the game. He was one of the star players at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as Zambia reached the quarter finals, trouncing Italy and Guatemala with 4–0 scorelines along the way. When a plane carrying the Zambian National team developed problems and plunged into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Gabon on 28 April 1993 killing all 30 people on board including crew members and Football Association of Zambia president Michael Mwape, Musonda was traumatised as he was supposed to have been on the same plane. According to one report, ",
"score": "1.5043881"
},
{
"id": "26832094",
"title": "Allan Musoke",
"text": " two times the MVP of the Ugandan rugby league. He plays at international level for Uganda, being currently the top scorer for the \"Cranes\". He was a key player in the team that won the CAR Africa Cup on 29 September 2007, in a 42–11 win over Madagascar, in a game where he scored a try. Musoke also played for the African Leopards multinational team, on July 23, 2005, in the 15–30 loss to the South African Students, in Ellis Park, Johannesburg. He decided to play again basketball for DMark Power in the FUBA league, of Uganda, in 2009, while also continuing his rugby career.",
"score": "1.5004194"
},
{
"id": "27925159",
"title": "Charly Musonda (footballer, born 1969)",
"text": " was called up by the national coach Godfrey Chitalu for the 1994 World Cup qualification match against Senegal but Anderlecht's team manager, Michel Verschueren, asked him to refuse the invitation and to play for Anderlecht, which Musonda did and therefore missed the fateful flight, though in an interview Musonda himself disclosed that when he first heard about the plane crash, he was in bed recovering from knee surgery and that was what saved his life. He would undergo seven operations on the same knee between 1991 and 1996. Musonda returned to Belgium and first worked as a youth coach at AA Ghent before moving to Anderlecht to become a youth coach, scout and assistant trainer for the first team.",
"score": "1.496191"
},
{
"id": "25308012",
"title": "Kabange Mupopo",
"text": " Mupopo started playing association football as an 11-year-old, inspired by her brother. She played for Green Buffaloes F.C. and the Zambia women's national football team; as team captain, she led Zambia to the 2014 African Women's Championship tournament, where they were eliminated in the group stage. Mupopo picked up athletics in the spring of 2014, running 53.44 for 400 metres in her first official meeting. She represented Zambia at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, where she ran 53.09 and was eliminated in the semi-finals. In August, she took silver in 51.21 at the African Championships in Marrakech, breaking the Zambian record; she lost ",
"score": "1.4945979"
},
{
"id": "14866717",
"title": "Thierry Mukuta",
"text": " Mukuta Kiesse started his playing career in 2005 with French club SCO Angers B where he became a reference. In 2009, he moved to German division Spandauer SV club in the Regionalliga Berlin 1 where he played 36 games and scoring 6 goals. The defensive midfielder was recruited in 3.Liga SV Wacker Burghausen club, in 2010, where he was trained by the famous Mario Basler. In 2011, Mukuta Kiesse decided to return in France to join the Ligue 2 US Orléans club for a season where he appeared in 49 of their matches and scoring 8 goals. Mukuta Kiesse joined the Ligue 1 Algerian RC Arbaa club in 2014.",
"score": "1.4917163"
},
{
"id": "16124329",
"title": "South Africa at the 2011 All-Africa Games",
"text": "Officials - Zanele Khanyile, Joseph Mkhonza, Bongani Yengwa ; Banyana Banyana - Yolula Tsawe, Ntshetsana Mputle, Sibongiseni Khamlana, Nthabeleng Modiko, Nondyebo Mgudu, Emily Mogatla, Matha Mokoma, Nomvula Kgoale, Chantelle Esau, Nocawe Sikiti, Sisebo Mabatle, Tina Selepe, Memory Makhanya, Nomakhosi Zulu, Andisiwe Mgcoyi, Mantombi Radebe The Banyana Banyana women’s side is also part of this strong contingent and are still in the running to qualify for next year’s Olympics. The South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC) are struggling to secure the names of the men’s football team. SASCOC received the final list of 18 players, however were told on 17 August 2011 that in a meeting between the CEOs of SAFA and the PSL, SAFA were given the indication that the PSL clubs refused to release their players.",
"score": "1.4877245"
}
] | [
"Mutanda Kwesele\n Mutanda has coached for several Seattle-area clubs, organizations and schools. He is currently a coach with Emerald City Football Club, and has coached for Rainier Beach High School. Mutanda is also founder of The Rising Point, a non-profit organization designed to bring quality soccer programs to underserved communities.",
"Mutanda Kwesele\n Mutanda Kwesele (born March 14, 1986 in Mufulira) is a Zambian footballer.",
"Mutanda Kwesele\n Kwesele moved from his native Zambia to the United States with his family as a child, settling in Seattle, Washington. He attended Seattle Preparatory School, where he was a two-time All-Metro and All-District selection, and began his college soccer at Santa Clara University. He transferred to Seattle University prior to his sophomore season in 2006, and played three seasons with the Redhawks, helping the team reach the NCAA tournament in back-to-back seasons in 2006 and 2007. He played in 42 games during his college career, recording two goals and five assists. During his college years Kwesele also played with the Tacoma Tide in the USL Premier Development League in 2007, playing in 10 games and scoring 1 goal.",
"Mumbi Kwesele\n Mumbi's brother is Mutanda Kwesele, who also played professional soccer.",
"Mutanda Kwesele\n Undrafted out of college, Kwesele was unable to secure a professional contract, and signed instead to play with the Portland Timbers U23s in the USL Premier Development League in 2009. He signed his first professional contract in 2011 when he signed with FC Edmonton of the North American Soccer League. He made his debut for Edmonton on May 4, 2011, in a 1-0 loss to Toronto FC in the 2011 Nutrilite Canadian Championship. The club released Kwesele on October 12, 2011 after the conclusion of the 2011 season.",
"Mumbi Kwesele\n Kwesele attended Barry University in 2015, where he played for two seasons. He transferred to Humboldt State University where he played during their 2016 and 2017 seasons.",
"Mumbi Kwesele\n Mumbi Kwesele (born February 26, 1995) is an American soccer player who plays as a midfielder for Richmond Kickers in the USL League One.",
"Godfrey Chitalu\n teammates Lameck Soko, Stephen Musonda and Winston Muamba. During his 3 years at the centre, Kwacha I remained champions in Kitwe District. Chitalu's talent was noticed by a club trainer called Tirivavi, who encouraged him to concentrate on playing football and forget about boxing so he hung up his gloves conditioned too by the fact that not many boys of his age were interested in the sport. In 1961, he completed his primary education and left Kitwe. He went to stay with his elder brother Stanley in Chingola and continued his studies at Mushishima Secondary School and played for the school ",
"Kwesé Sports\n Kwesé Sports was a sport website serving Sub-Saharan Africa operated by Econet Media, a subsidiary of Econet Wireless. Kwesé Sports was launched on 4 December 2015 with the announcement made by Econet Wireless founder Strive Masiyiwa, on the social networking site Facebook.",
"Rachael Muema\n At age 7, Rachael started playing football with village boys in Kitui County. She was later on selected to represent Mutanda Primary School in the national ball games. She continued playing football when she joined Nginda Girls High School, where she was later made captain and led the school in many inter-school games, including national and East African high school competitions. Muema's role model is Doreen Nabwire and inspired by the former Kenyan international's football journey and her record of being the first Kenyan woman to play professional football in Europe as her dream is to play in Europe.",
"Junior Kwebiha\n Kwebiha first played for Uganda in 2001, at the 2001 ICC Trophy in Canada. He made his first-class debut in 2004, playing against Namibia and Kenya in the ICC Intercontinental Cup. He also played a match in the 2005 tournament against Namibia. He made his List A debut in 2005, playing in the 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland. He has continued in the Ugandan team, playing matches against Bermuda and Canada in January 2007, before representing Uganda in Division Three of the World Cricket League later in the year, a tournament that Uganda won. He won the man of the match award in Uganda's match against the Cayman Islands after taking 4/11 in the Cayman Islands innings.",
"Athletics at the All-Africa University Games\n1979: 🇰🇪 James Munyala (KEN) ",
"Dikembe Mutombo\n 2009 season and was named Southern Conference Freshman of the Year. His nephew Haboubacar Mutombo also committed to play basketball at Western Carolina beginning in 2013. His nephew Mfiondu Kabengele played college basketball at Florida State University and was the 2018–19 ACC Sixth Man of the Year. He later was drafted in the first round of the 2019 NBA draft and signed a playing contract with the Los Angeles Clippers. Mutombo was among those who witnessed the 2016 Brussels bombings at Brussels Airport on March 22, 2016. Shortly after the bombings, he posted a report on his Facebook page saying that he was safe. His first post said, \"God is good. I am in the Brussels Airport with this craziness. I am fine.\"",
"Itumeleng Khune\n Khune was born in Tshing, Ventersdorp in the North West as one of six children of Elias and Flora Khune. He is of Tswana heritage. His father Elias, worked as a driver at a mine in Carletonville and also played amateur football as a striker. Unlike many South African players who cite kicking a football on their hometown's dusty streets as their starting point, Khune was in love with cricket idolising Nicky Boje. He eventually decided to pursue a career in football to earn a living for him and his family. He attended New Nation, Westridge, St Barnabas and RW Fick High Schools. His younger brother Lucky Khune previously played as a striker for Chiefs and currently for PSL side Chippa United. Khune is nicknamed \"Spider-Man\" for his reflexes and flexible goalkeeping skills. In 2019 Khune and his wife Sphelele Makhunga got married traditionally.",
"Charly Musonda (footballer, born 1969)\n His debut as a professional for Zambia came in 1988 against Ghana in Lusaka which Zambia won 2–0 and Musonda did not disappoint, tellingly imposing himself on the game. He was one of the star players at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as Zambia reached the quarter finals, trouncing Italy and Guatemala with 4–0 scorelines along the way. When a plane carrying the Zambian National team developed problems and plunged into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Gabon on 28 April 1993 killing all 30 people on board including crew members and Football Association of Zambia president Michael Mwape, Musonda was traumatised as he was supposed to have been on the same plane. According to one report, ",
"Allan Musoke\n two times the MVP of the Ugandan rugby league. He plays at international level for Uganda, being currently the top scorer for the \"Cranes\". He was a key player in the team that won the CAR Africa Cup on 29 September 2007, in a 42–11 win over Madagascar, in a game where he scored a try. Musoke also played for the African Leopards multinational team, on July 23, 2005, in the 15–30 loss to the South African Students, in Ellis Park, Johannesburg. He decided to play again basketball for DMark Power in the FUBA league, of Uganda, in 2009, while also continuing his rugby career.",
"Charly Musonda (footballer, born 1969)\n was called up by the national coach Godfrey Chitalu for the 1994 World Cup qualification match against Senegal but Anderlecht's team manager, Michel Verschueren, asked him to refuse the invitation and to play for Anderlecht, which Musonda did and therefore missed the fateful flight, though in an interview Musonda himself disclosed that when he first heard about the plane crash, he was in bed recovering from knee surgery and that was what saved his life. He would undergo seven operations on the same knee between 1991 and 1996. Musonda returned to Belgium and first worked as a youth coach at AA Ghent before moving to Anderlecht to become a youth coach, scout and assistant trainer for the first team.",
"Kabange Mupopo\n Mupopo started playing association football as an 11-year-old, inspired by her brother. She played for Green Buffaloes F.C. and the Zambia women's national football team; as team captain, she led Zambia to the 2014 African Women's Championship tournament, where they were eliminated in the group stage. Mupopo picked up athletics in the spring of 2014, running 53.44 for 400 metres in her first official meeting. She represented Zambia at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, where she ran 53.09 and was eliminated in the semi-finals. In August, she took silver in 51.21 at the African Championships in Marrakech, breaking the Zambian record; she lost ",
"Thierry Mukuta\n Mukuta Kiesse started his playing career in 2005 with French club SCO Angers B where he became a reference. In 2009, he moved to German division Spandauer SV club in the Regionalliga Berlin 1 where he played 36 games and scoring 6 goals. The defensive midfielder was recruited in 3.Liga SV Wacker Burghausen club, in 2010, where he was trained by the famous Mario Basler. In 2011, Mukuta Kiesse decided to return in France to join the Ligue 2 US Orléans club for a season where he appeared in 49 of their matches and scoring 8 goals. Mukuta Kiesse joined the Ligue 1 Algerian RC Arbaa club in 2014.",
"South Africa at the 2011 All-Africa Games\nOfficials - Zanele Khanyile, Joseph Mkhonza, Bongani Yengwa ; Banyana Banyana - Yolula Tsawe, Ntshetsana Mputle, Sibongiseni Khamlana, Nthabeleng Modiko, Nondyebo Mgudu, Emily Mogatla, Matha Mokoma, Nomvula Kgoale, Chantelle Esau, Nocawe Sikiti, Sisebo Mabatle, Tina Selepe, Memory Makhanya, Nomakhosi Zulu, Andisiwe Mgcoyi, Mantombi Radebe The Banyana Banyana women’s side is also part of this strong contingent and are still in the running to qualify for next year’s Olympics. The South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC) are struggling to secure the names of the men’s football team. SASCOC received the final list of 18 players, however were told on 17 August 2011 that in a meeting between the CEOs of SAFA and the PSL, SAFA were given the indication that the PSL clubs refused to release their players."
] |
What sport does Marc Herold Gracien play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Marc Hérold Gracien | 2,871,635 | 83 | [
{
"id": "31000356",
"title": "Marc Hérold Gracien",
"text": " Gracien grew up in France and was part of storied French club Paris Saint-Germain's youth academy, where he played from the age of 14.",
"score": "2.1511254"
},
{
"id": "31000354",
"title": "Marc Hérold Gracien",
"text": " Marc Hérold Gracien (born May 5, 1983 in Saint-Marc) is a Haitian footballer.",
"score": "2.093762"
},
{
"id": "31000358",
"title": "Marc Hérold Gracien",
"text": " Gracien made his debut for the Haiti national football team in 2004. He played the qualifying games for the 2006 FIFA World Cup and the 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup.",
"score": "2.043521"
},
{
"id": "31000357",
"title": "Marc Hérold Gracien",
"text": " Gracien began his professional career in France at the age of 18, playing with lower-league sides such as La Rochelle, Les Lilas, Brive and Plessis-Robinson. Gracien signed with the Real Maryland Monarchs in the USL Second Division in 2009, playing eight games and scoring 1 goal and one assist in his debut season with the team. SS La Gauloise (Reunion Island Indian Ocean) played 27 games and scored 11 goals. In January 2010, Gracien signed a 2-year contract with the Indian Ocean side. Gracien is extremely fast, very skillful and his ability to play with both feet is impressive. He has a strong strike and he is a great goal scorer.",
"score": "2.018611"
},
{
"id": "31000355",
"title": "Marc Hérold Gracien",
"text": " At the age of 17 in 2001, Marc-Herold Gracien was considered as the fastest player in France by beating Nicolas Anelka's record after a physical test at Clarefontaine (The National Institute of Soccer)",
"score": "1.9549389"
},
{
"id": "15089470",
"title": "Charles Hérold Jr.",
"text": " Charles Hérold Jr. (born 23 July 1990) is a Haitian footballer who plays as a right winger for Cibao FC in the Liga Dominicana de Fútbol.",
"score": "1.6360476"
},
{
"id": "5020485",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " Constantin Herold (4 February 1912 – 28 August 1984) was a Romanian multi-sport athlete that practiced through his career 14 sports. He was mostly known for his activity in basketball, where he was a player and coach. On 17 June 2005, he received post-mortem the Honorary Citizen of Moreni title.",
"score": "1.6349019"
},
{
"id": "5020493",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " represented Romania at the 1937 Balkan Championship at 110 metres hurdles, where he finished second. Constantin Herold played handball in 11 for the national team, being part of Romania's squad at the 1937 World Cup from Magdeburg, Germany. In 1946, he won as player, captain and coach of Romania's national volleyball team the Balkan Championship, played in Bucharest. He played volleyball until the age of 43 at I.C.F.S. In 1954, Constantin Herold received the title of \"emeritus master of sports\" for his multi-sport activity and in 1966 he received the title of \"emeritus coach\" for teaching and forming generations of players. Constantin Herold practiced and competed in a total of 14 sports disciplines:",
"score": "1.6245189"
},
{
"id": "5020487",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " Constantin Herold played his first basketball game in 1934 for his college team ANEFS at the first ever National University Championship in a 4–27 loss against the University of Law School Bucharest team. Later he played for Telefon Club București who in 1950 merged with CFR București, forming Locomotiva PTT București, where Herold was a player-coach, managing to win the 1951 Romanian League title. He also played 24 games for the national team, including appearances at EuroBasket 1947 where the team finished on the 10th position with Herold having a 6.6 average points per game scored. In 1952 he transferred to new founded club CCA București where he ",
"score": "1.5985621"
},
{
"id": "2829191",
"title": "Marc-André Bergeron (taekwondo)",
"text": " Marc-André Bergeron (born 22 July 1991) is a Canadian taekwondo practitioner. In 2015, he was named to be in Canada's team at the 2015 Pan American Games, which were held in Toronto. He won a gold medal at the 2013 Dutch Open and a gold medal at the 2014 Pan American Championships.",
"score": "1.578084"
},
{
"id": "25292279",
"title": "Maxime Hérold",
"text": " Maxime Hérold (born 9 September 1989) is a French professional rugby league footballer who plays as a or for the Limoux Grizzlies in the Elite One Championship. He is a France international.",
"score": "1.5773969"
},
{
"id": "5020486",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " Constantin Herold was born in Moreni from a family of six children. He had an attraction for sport while being a pre-school child, playing football at the M.A.T.I.L.U.S. sports association. At the age of 10, he won a children athletics competition in Moreni, being first at all five disciplines (shot put, long jump, high jump, sprint run and long-distance running). Later he moved in Ploiești at the \"Saints Peter and Pavel\" High School where he continued exercising athletics and football, also starting to participate at gymnastics disciplines. In 1926 he moved to Brașov where he attended the Ioan Meșotă and Andrei Șaguna National Colleges where he continued to develop his multi-sport abilities, winning school inter-class decathlon competitions. In 1931, he became a student at the National University of Physical Education and Sport (ANEFS).",
"score": "1.5684068"
},
{
"id": "5020490",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " – the third place at the national rifle championships, with the performance of 391 points out of 400 possible ; Alpine skiing – champion in the military patrol competition ; Rowing – participant in the city championships of Bucharest as part of the Telefon Club București team ; Water polo – goalkeeper at Telefon Club București in the city championship ; Table tennis – trade union champion of the Capital in the mixed doubles event from 1946, together with Mariana Bunescu ; Tennis – played in the second category championship and qualifiers of Bucharest for the C.C.A. and Justice team ; Rugby – player at Telefon Club București ; Fencing – university champion ",
"score": "1.5655131"
},
{
"id": "5020491",
"title": "Constantin Herold",
"text": " Bucharest at foil and sabre in 1934 ; Gymnastics – member of the model team of ANEFS at the demonstrations from the student camp organized on the occasion of the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. During his years as a student at ANEFS, Constantin Herold got a job as a sports instructor at Telefon Club București, where together with other colleagues from the firm he founded the volleyball, basketball and handball teams of the club. Herold played football as a goalkeeper at junior level alongside Iuliu Bodola at B.M.T.E. Brașov. He made his debut in an official match for the senior team at the age of 15 in a 2–1 loss against Colțea ",
"score": "1.5598571"
},
{
"id": "25292280",
"title": "Maxime Hérold",
"text": " In 2014 he signed for the London Broncos in the Super League, after an initial four-week trial. In 2014 Hérold returned to France and re-joined Limoux Grizzlies in the Elite Championship. He made his France début in 2015 against Serbia.",
"score": "1.524735"
},
{
"id": "3638106",
"title": "Marc Dorion",
"text": " Marc Dorion (born June 22, 1987) is a Canadian ice sledge hockey player. He was born with spina bifida, which meant he could not use his legs. He began to play ice sledge hockey when he was 4, at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, and has continued in the sport ever since. He won gold at the 2006 Paralympics when he was 19, and was the team's youngest member. He has played for the Canadian national team since he was 16.",
"score": "1.52435"
},
{
"id": "10020500",
"title": "Justin Herold",
"text": " Justin Michael Herold (born January 11, 1991) is an American professional basketball player for Iwate Big Bulls in Japan.",
"score": "1.5160445"
},
{
"id": "6409383",
"title": "Yannick Borel",
"text": " and took an early 6–2 lead, but failed to press his advantage and was finally defeated 14–15 by Piasecki, who eventually won the silver medal. After the Games Borel was dropped from the national team and had two dry seasons, although he was France's flagbearer at the 2013 University Games. He bounced back in the 2014–15 season with a silver medal at the Heidenheim World Cup. He competed for France at the 2016 Olympics, where he was part of the French team that won the team gold medal. Because of this, he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour.",
"score": "1.5152149"
},
{
"id": "27958996",
"title": "Marc Minguell",
"text": " Marc Minguell Alférez (born 14 January 1985 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo player who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in three consecutive Summer Olympics (2008 Beijing, 2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season.",
"score": "1.5139776"
},
{
"id": "11083962",
"title": "Pierre-Luc Thériault",
"text": "2011 Pan American Games: 9th (singles), 5th (team) ; 2012 North American Champion and 2012 North American Cup Winner ; 2014 Commonwealth Games: 17th (singles), 5th (doubles), 9th (team), 33rd (mixed doubles) ; 2015 Pan American Games: 5th (singles), Bronze Medal (team) ; Canadian National Tournaments : ; 2009 Canadian U21 SinglesChampion ; 2013 Quebec Senior Singles Champion ; 2014 Canada Series Final Winner ; 2015 Canada Series Final Winner ; 2015 Canadian Senior Singles Champion Pierre-Luc Thériault (born October 25, 1993 in St-Fabien, Quebec) is a Canadian table tennis player. Pierre-Luc Thériault wanted to represent Canada since watching the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games and seeing other athletes ",
"score": "1.5085632"
}
] | [
"Marc Hérold Gracien\n Gracien grew up in France and was part of storied French club Paris Saint-Germain's youth academy, where he played from the age of 14.",
"Marc Hérold Gracien\n Marc Hérold Gracien (born May 5, 1983 in Saint-Marc) is a Haitian footballer.",
"Marc Hérold Gracien\n Gracien made his debut for the Haiti national football team in 2004. He played the qualifying games for the 2006 FIFA World Cup and the 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup.",
"Marc Hérold Gracien\n Gracien began his professional career in France at the age of 18, playing with lower-league sides such as La Rochelle, Les Lilas, Brive and Plessis-Robinson. Gracien signed with the Real Maryland Monarchs in the USL Second Division in 2009, playing eight games and scoring 1 goal and one assist in his debut season with the team. SS La Gauloise (Reunion Island Indian Ocean) played 27 games and scored 11 goals. In January 2010, Gracien signed a 2-year contract with the Indian Ocean side. Gracien is extremely fast, very skillful and his ability to play with both feet is impressive. He has a strong strike and he is a great goal scorer.",
"Marc Hérold Gracien\n At the age of 17 in 2001, Marc-Herold Gracien was considered as the fastest player in France by beating Nicolas Anelka's record after a physical test at Clarefontaine (The National Institute of Soccer)",
"Charles Hérold Jr.\n Charles Hérold Jr. (born 23 July 1990) is a Haitian footballer who plays as a right winger for Cibao FC in the Liga Dominicana de Fútbol.",
"Constantin Herold\n Constantin Herold (4 February 1912 – 28 August 1984) was a Romanian multi-sport athlete that practiced through his career 14 sports. He was mostly known for his activity in basketball, where he was a player and coach. On 17 June 2005, he received post-mortem the Honorary Citizen of Moreni title.",
"Constantin Herold\n represented Romania at the 1937 Balkan Championship at 110 metres hurdles, where he finished second. Constantin Herold played handball in 11 for the national team, being part of Romania's squad at the 1937 World Cup from Magdeburg, Germany. In 1946, he won as player, captain and coach of Romania's national volleyball team the Balkan Championship, played in Bucharest. He played volleyball until the age of 43 at I.C.F.S. In 1954, Constantin Herold received the title of \"emeritus master of sports\" for his multi-sport activity and in 1966 he received the title of \"emeritus coach\" for teaching and forming generations of players. Constantin Herold practiced and competed in a total of 14 sports disciplines:",
"Constantin Herold\n Constantin Herold played his first basketball game in 1934 for his college team ANEFS at the first ever National University Championship in a 4–27 loss against the University of Law School Bucharest team. Later he played for Telefon Club București who in 1950 merged with CFR București, forming Locomotiva PTT București, where Herold was a player-coach, managing to win the 1951 Romanian League title. He also played 24 games for the national team, including appearances at EuroBasket 1947 where the team finished on the 10th position with Herold having a 6.6 average points per game scored. In 1952 he transferred to new founded club CCA București where he ",
"Marc-André Bergeron (taekwondo)\n Marc-André Bergeron (born 22 July 1991) is a Canadian taekwondo practitioner. In 2015, he was named to be in Canada's team at the 2015 Pan American Games, which were held in Toronto. He won a gold medal at the 2013 Dutch Open and a gold medal at the 2014 Pan American Championships.",
"Maxime Hérold\n Maxime Hérold (born 9 September 1989) is a French professional rugby league footballer who plays as a or for the Limoux Grizzlies in the Elite One Championship. He is a France international.",
"Constantin Herold\n Constantin Herold was born in Moreni from a family of six children. He had an attraction for sport while being a pre-school child, playing football at the M.A.T.I.L.U.S. sports association. At the age of 10, he won a children athletics competition in Moreni, being first at all five disciplines (shot put, long jump, high jump, sprint run and long-distance running). Later he moved in Ploiești at the \"Saints Peter and Pavel\" High School where he continued exercising athletics and football, also starting to participate at gymnastics disciplines. In 1926 he moved to Brașov where he attended the Ioan Meșotă and Andrei Șaguna National Colleges where he continued to develop his multi-sport abilities, winning school inter-class decathlon competitions. In 1931, he became a student at the National University of Physical Education and Sport (ANEFS).",
"Constantin Herold\n – the third place at the national rifle championships, with the performance of 391 points out of 400 possible ; Alpine skiing – champion in the military patrol competition ; Rowing – participant in the city championships of Bucharest as part of the Telefon Club București team ; Water polo – goalkeeper at Telefon Club București in the city championship ; Table tennis – trade union champion of the Capital in the mixed doubles event from 1946, together with Mariana Bunescu ; Tennis – played in the second category championship and qualifiers of Bucharest for the C.C.A. and Justice team ; Rugby – player at Telefon Club București ; Fencing – university champion ",
"Constantin Herold\n Bucharest at foil and sabre in 1934 ; Gymnastics – member of the model team of ANEFS at the demonstrations from the student camp organized on the occasion of the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. During his years as a student at ANEFS, Constantin Herold got a job as a sports instructor at Telefon Club București, where together with other colleagues from the firm he founded the volleyball, basketball and handball teams of the club. Herold played football as a goalkeeper at junior level alongside Iuliu Bodola at B.M.T.E. Brașov. He made his debut in an official match for the senior team at the age of 15 in a 2–1 loss against Colțea ",
"Maxime Hérold\n In 2014 he signed for the London Broncos in the Super League, after an initial four-week trial. In 2014 Hérold returned to France and re-joined Limoux Grizzlies in the Elite Championship. He made his France début in 2015 against Serbia.",
"Marc Dorion\n Marc Dorion (born June 22, 1987) is a Canadian ice sledge hockey player. He was born with spina bifida, which meant he could not use his legs. He began to play ice sledge hockey when he was 4, at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, and has continued in the sport ever since. He won gold at the 2006 Paralympics when he was 19, and was the team's youngest member. He has played for the Canadian national team since he was 16.",
"Justin Herold\n Justin Michael Herold (born January 11, 1991) is an American professional basketball player for Iwate Big Bulls in Japan.",
"Yannick Borel\n and took an early 6–2 lead, but failed to press his advantage and was finally defeated 14–15 by Piasecki, who eventually won the silver medal. After the Games Borel was dropped from the national team and had two dry seasons, although he was France's flagbearer at the 2013 University Games. He bounced back in the 2014–15 season with a silver medal at the Heidenheim World Cup. He competed for France at the 2016 Olympics, where he was part of the French team that won the team gold medal. Because of this, he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour.",
"Marc Minguell\n Marc Minguell Alférez (born 14 January 1985 in Barcelona) is a Spanish water polo player who competed for the Spain men's national water polo team in three consecutive Summer Olympics (2008 Beijing, 2012 London and 2016 Rio. He helped Spanish water polo club CN Atlètic-Barceloneta win the LEN Champions League in 2013–14 season.",
"Pierre-Luc Thériault\n2011 Pan American Games: 9th (singles), 5th (team) ; 2012 North American Champion and 2012 North American Cup Winner ; 2014 Commonwealth Games: 17th (singles), 5th (doubles), 9th (team), 33rd (mixed doubles) ; 2015 Pan American Games: 5th (singles), Bronze Medal (team) ; Canadian National Tournaments : ; 2009 Canadian U21 SinglesChampion ; 2013 Quebec Senior Singles Champion ; 2014 Canada Series Final Winner ; 2015 Canada Series Final Winner ; 2015 Canadian Senior Singles Champion Pierre-Luc Thériault (born October 25, 1993 in St-Fabien, Quebec) is a Canadian table tennis player. Pierre-Luc Thériault wanted to represent Canada since watching the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games and seeing other athletes "
] |
What sport does Barrie Aitchison play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Barrie Aitchison | 80,903 | 82 | [
{
"id": "9592274",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " Barrie George Aitchison (born 15 November 1937) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United, where he came through the youth ranks before joining Tottenham Hotspur, but failed to make a first-team appearance. His older brother Peter also played professionally for Colchester United.",
"score": "1.8204508"
},
{
"id": "9592277",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " As a result of his footballing and injury suffered while with Colchester United, Aitchison underwent a cartilage operation in 1970. Following his retirement from the professional game, he worked for Alston's in Colchester, a furniture upholsterers.",
"score": "1.7796715"
},
{
"id": "9948822",
"title": "Peter Aitchison",
"text": " Peter Munro Aitchison (born 19 September 1931) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United. His younger brother Barrie also played professionally for Colchester.",
"score": "1.6740711"
},
{
"id": "9584535",
"title": "Jack Aitchison",
"text": " Jack Aitchison (born 5 March 2000) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a forward for Forest Green Rovers on loan from Barnsley.",
"score": "1.6519892"
},
{
"id": "9592275",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " Born in Colchester, Aitchison followed in his brother Peter's footsteps by joining Colchester United from Border League football in 1953, but was considered too slight and was released in 1954, joining Tottenham Hotspur. He spent ten years with the club, mostly in the reserves and other minor sides, during which time they won the Football Combination twice. A fee of £750 brought Aitchison back to Layer Road in 1964 having failed to make a first-team breakthrough whilst at Tottenham. Aitchison made his Colchester debut on 22 August 1964 in a 1–0 defeat at home to Carlisle United. He scored his first professional goal on 2 ",
"score": "1.6301689"
},
{
"id": "6780026",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " Barrie made his international debut at the 2008 World U-17 Hockey Challenge with Team Canada Pacific. Barrie was first invited to partake in Canada's national junior team development camp in 2010. He was again included to take part in Canada's 2011 national junior team selection camp and was among the final names to make the team. He was among the team's top players during the tournament as Canada won the silver medal following a 5–3 collapse defeat against Russia in the tournament final. Barrie would win gold with team Canada in the 2015 IIHF World Championship, along with then Colorado Avalanche teammates Matt Duchene, Nathan MacKinnon and Ryan O'Reilly. Following Colorado's failure to qualify for the 2017 playoffs, Barrie was selected to the initial Canada roster for the 2017 IIHF World Championship held in Germany and France. He was among the tournament leaders with seven points in three games before he was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament after suffering a laceration to his leg while wrestling with a Canada teammate at the team hotel on May 11, 2017.",
"score": "1.6179936"
},
{
"id": "8860389",
"title": "Holly Aitchison",
"text": " Holly Aitchison (born 21 February 1997) is an English rugby union player. Born in Southport, she attended St Peter’s Primary School and Range High School in Formby where she was coached by Gill Burns. Aitchison is the daughter of former England Saxon and rugby coach Ian Aitchison. She played for Waterloo Ladies as a junior and Gloucester-Hartpury Women and Lichfield Ladies. She was a two-time U18 Rugby Europe Women's Sevens champion with England and a member of the squad that lifted the Challenge Trophy at the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens. In September 2020 she joined Saracens Women. In 2021 she played for the Great Britain Rugby Sevens squad in the delayed 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, where they finished fourth. In October 2021, she scored a try on her debut for the England 15s team.",
"score": "1.5721651"
},
{
"id": "9584536",
"title": "Jack Aitchison",
"text": " Aitchison graduated from Celtic's school of excellence at St Ninians High School in Kirkintilloch in February 2016, at which time he joined Celtic full-time and became part of their Under 17 squad. He played in the Celtic U17 side that defeated their Rangers counterparts 4–0 in the Glasgow Cup final in April 2016. At this time, he also signed a three-year contract. During his youth career he also appeared and scored in the 2015–16 and 2016–17 editions of the UEFA Youth League, found the net against senior clubs in the 2016–17 Scottish Challenge Cup, and won the Scottish Youth Cup in 2017. Aitchison made his first team debut on 15 May 2016, becoming the youngest player ever to represent the club in a competitive match at 16 years and 71 days. He scored with ",
"score": "1.5663743"
},
{
"id": "12721954",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " Aitchison played for Edinburgh Wanderers, one of the top teams in Scotland at the time.",
"score": "1.5557537"
},
{
"id": "9816034",
"title": "Jack Aitchison (Australian footballer)",
"text": " John Charles Aitchison (6 April 1911 – 3 September 1976) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"score": "1.5494955"
},
{
"id": "9592276",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " of the same year in a 1–1 League Cup draw with Torquay United, going on to score six goals in the Football League in 50 games for the club. In September 1965, during a 2–0 home victory over Rochdale, Aitchison suffered an injury that would ultimately lead to his retirement from the full-time game, as he went on to play his final Football League and final professional game on 28 May 1966, a 2–1 away defeat to Newport County. After declining Colchester's offer of a part-time contract for the 1966–67 season, Aitchison moved to non-league Cambridge City before transferring to Bury Town a season later.",
"score": "1.5486581"
},
{
"id": "14997408",
"title": "Helen Aitchison",
"text": " Frances Helen Aitchison (6 December 1881 – 26 May 1947) was a Sunderland-born tennis player who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. In 1912 she won the silver medal with her partner Herbert Barrett in the indoor mixed doubles competition. She also participated in the indoor singles event but was eliminated in the quarter-finals.",
"score": "1.5428392"
},
{
"id": "5286020",
"title": "John Aitchison (cricketer)",
"text": " John Edward Aitchison (27 December 1928 – 2 April 2009) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and a slow left-arm bowler who played for Kent County Cricket Club. He was born in Gillingham, Kent in 1928. Aitchison was taken on to the ground staff at Kent in 1946, living with an aunt in Whitstable. He made his debut for the Kent Second XI later in the year before playing for the county Second XI in the 1947 Minor Counties Championship. Aitchison did not play throughout 1948 when he was posted on National Service in Germany. He made his first-class cricket debut just three days after his first Second XI appearance of 1949, playing against Glamorgan at Gravesend. He took all three of his first-class wickets on his debut. Aitchison played two further matches for Kent's First XI in July 1950 against Worcestershire and Leicestershire. He was described by Derek Ufton, a contemporary on the Kent ground staff, as \"a left-arm bowler with a beautiful action\". He died at Sydenham in South London in 2009 aged 80.",
"score": "1.5317628"
},
{
"id": "6780006",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " Tyson Barrie (born July 26, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who is currently playing for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played for the Colorado Avalanche and Toronto Maple Leafs. He was drafted by the Avalanche in the third round, 64th overall, of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.5147506"
},
{
"id": "6780012",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " After attending his third Avalanche training camp, Barrie made his professional debut in the 2011–12 season, assigned to the Avalanche's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lake Erie Monsters. As a defenceman, he impressively led the Monsters in scoring at the midpoint of the season and was selected in the AHL All-Star Game, scoring a goal and helping the Western Conference to victory. Shortly after, on February 4, 2012, he received his first NHL call-up by the Avalanche. He made his NHL debut three days later on February 7 in a 5–2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at the Pepsi Center. He appeared in four games before ",
"score": "1.5119867"
},
{
"id": "9948824",
"title": "Peter Aitchison",
"text": " Aitchison remained in the Colchester area following his retirement from the game, where he worked for BT until his retirement in September 1991.",
"score": "1.5092473"
},
{
"id": "30988192",
"title": "Barrie Central Collegiate Institute",
"text": "Kayla Alexander, WNBA player with Indiana Fever ; Emily Belchos, Canadian Women's 7's Rugby Team 2013–present ; Charles Drury, first Ontario Minister of Agriculture, 1888 ; E.C. Drury, Premier of Ontario, 1919-1923 ; William Gallie, Professor of Surgery, University of Toronto ; Ron Hoggarth, former NHL Referee 1971-1994 ; Afie Jurvanen, Canadian musician - Bahamas ; Janice Laking, Mayor of Barrie 1988-2000 ; Jeff Lehman, politician, Barrie Mayor 2010–present ; Megan Lukan, rugby union player, member of Canada's Women's rugby sevens team ; Steve Myddelton, CFL player ; Taylor Paris, Professional Rugby Player, Canadian Men's 7's and 15's Rugby Player, 2010–present ; Luke Tait, Professional Rugby Player, Former, Canadian Men's 15's Rugby Player, 2005-2011 ; Bobbie Rosenfeld, 1928 Olympian (Track and Field) ",
"score": "1.4968346"
},
{
"id": "4750512",
"title": "Len Barrie",
"text": " Leonard G. Barrie (born June 4, 1969 in Kimberley, British Columbia) is a retired professional ice hockey forward who played 184 games in the National Hockey League. He played for the Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Los Angeles Kings, and Florida Panthers. He was a co-owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, and was the president and coach of the Victoria Grizzlies of the British Columbia Hockey League.",
"score": "1.4912717"
},
{
"id": "12721953",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " George Aitchison (19 October 1864 – 25 January 1895) was a Scotland international rugby union player. He played as a halfback.",
"score": "1.4902861"
},
{
"id": "12721956",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " He was called up to the Scotland squad for the Home Nations Championship and played Ireland at Belfast on 17 February 1883.",
"score": "1.4822443"
}
] | [
"Barrie Aitchison\n Barrie George Aitchison (born 15 November 1937) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United, where he came through the youth ranks before joining Tottenham Hotspur, but failed to make a first-team appearance. His older brother Peter also played professionally for Colchester United.",
"Barrie Aitchison\n As a result of his footballing and injury suffered while with Colchester United, Aitchison underwent a cartilage operation in 1970. Following his retirement from the professional game, he worked for Alston's in Colchester, a furniture upholsterers.",
"Peter Aitchison\n Peter Munro Aitchison (born 19 September 1931) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United. His younger brother Barrie also played professionally for Colchester.",
"Jack Aitchison\n Jack Aitchison (born 5 March 2000) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a forward for Forest Green Rovers on loan from Barnsley.",
"Barrie Aitchison\n Born in Colchester, Aitchison followed in his brother Peter's footsteps by joining Colchester United from Border League football in 1953, but was considered too slight and was released in 1954, joining Tottenham Hotspur. He spent ten years with the club, mostly in the reserves and other minor sides, during which time they won the Football Combination twice. A fee of £750 brought Aitchison back to Layer Road in 1964 having failed to make a first-team breakthrough whilst at Tottenham. Aitchison made his Colchester debut on 22 August 1964 in a 1–0 defeat at home to Carlisle United. He scored his first professional goal on 2 ",
"Tyson Barrie\n Barrie made his international debut at the 2008 World U-17 Hockey Challenge with Team Canada Pacific. Barrie was first invited to partake in Canada's national junior team development camp in 2010. He was again included to take part in Canada's 2011 national junior team selection camp and was among the final names to make the team. He was among the team's top players during the tournament as Canada won the silver medal following a 5–3 collapse defeat against Russia in the tournament final. Barrie would win gold with team Canada in the 2015 IIHF World Championship, along with then Colorado Avalanche teammates Matt Duchene, Nathan MacKinnon and Ryan O'Reilly. Following Colorado's failure to qualify for the 2017 playoffs, Barrie was selected to the initial Canada roster for the 2017 IIHF World Championship held in Germany and France. He was among the tournament leaders with seven points in three games before he was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament after suffering a laceration to his leg while wrestling with a Canada teammate at the team hotel on May 11, 2017.",
"Holly Aitchison\n Holly Aitchison (born 21 February 1997) is an English rugby union player. Born in Southport, she attended St Peter’s Primary School and Range High School in Formby where she was coached by Gill Burns. Aitchison is the daughter of former England Saxon and rugby coach Ian Aitchison. She played for Waterloo Ladies as a junior and Gloucester-Hartpury Women and Lichfield Ladies. She was a two-time U18 Rugby Europe Women's Sevens champion with England and a member of the squad that lifted the Challenge Trophy at the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens. In September 2020 she joined Saracens Women. In 2021 she played for the Great Britain Rugby Sevens squad in the delayed 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, where they finished fourth. In October 2021, she scored a try on her debut for the England 15s team.",
"Jack Aitchison\n Aitchison graduated from Celtic's school of excellence at St Ninians High School in Kirkintilloch in February 2016, at which time he joined Celtic full-time and became part of their Under 17 squad. He played in the Celtic U17 side that defeated their Rangers counterparts 4–0 in the Glasgow Cup final in April 2016. At this time, he also signed a three-year contract. During his youth career he also appeared and scored in the 2015–16 and 2016–17 editions of the UEFA Youth League, found the net against senior clubs in the 2016–17 Scottish Challenge Cup, and won the Scottish Youth Cup in 2017. Aitchison made his first team debut on 15 May 2016, becoming the youngest player ever to represent the club in a competitive match at 16 years and 71 days. He scored with ",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n Aitchison played for Edinburgh Wanderers, one of the top teams in Scotland at the time.",
"Jack Aitchison (Australian footballer)\n John Charles Aitchison (6 April 1911 – 3 September 1976) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"Barrie Aitchison\n of the same year in a 1–1 League Cup draw with Torquay United, going on to score six goals in the Football League in 50 games for the club. In September 1965, during a 2–0 home victory over Rochdale, Aitchison suffered an injury that would ultimately lead to his retirement from the full-time game, as he went on to play his final Football League and final professional game on 28 May 1966, a 2–1 away defeat to Newport County. After declining Colchester's offer of a part-time contract for the 1966–67 season, Aitchison moved to non-league Cambridge City before transferring to Bury Town a season later.",
"Helen Aitchison\n Frances Helen Aitchison (6 December 1881 – 26 May 1947) was a Sunderland-born tennis player who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. In 1912 she won the silver medal with her partner Herbert Barrett in the indoor mixed doubles competition. She also participated in the indoor singles event but was eliminated in the quarter-finals.",
"John Aitchison (cricketer)\n John Edward Aitchison (27 December 1928 – 2 April 2009) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and a slow left-arm bowler who played for Kent County Cricket Club. He was born in Gillingham, Kent in 1928. Aitchison was taken on to the ground staff at Kent in 1946, living with an aunt in Whitstable. He made his debut for the Kent Second XI later in the year before playing for the county Second XI in the 1947 Minor Counties Championship. Aitchison did not play throughout 1948 when he was posted on National Service in Germany. He made his first-class cricket debut just three days after his first Second XI appearance of 1949, playing against Glamorgan at Gravesend. He took all three of his first-class wickets on his debut. Aitchison played two further matches for Kent's First XI in July 1950 against Worcestershire and Leicestershire. He was described by Derek Ufton, a contemporary on the Kent ground staff, as \"a left-arm bowler with a beautiful action\". He died at Sydenham in South London in 2009 aged 80.",
"Tyson Barrie\n Tyson Barrie (born July 26, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who is currently playing for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played for the Colorado Avalanche and Toronto Maple Leafs. He was drafted by the Avalanche in the third round, 64th overall, of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Tyson Barrie\n After attending his third Avalanche training camp, Barrie made his professional debut in the 2011–12 season, assigned to the Avalanche's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lake Erie Monsters. As a defenceman, he impressively led the Monsters in scoring at the midpoint of the season and was selected in the AHL All-Star Game, scoring a goal and helping the Western Conference to victory. Shortly after, on February 4, 2012, he received his first NHL call-up by the Avalanche. He made his NHL debut three days later on February 7 in a 5–2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at the Pepsi Center. He appeared in four games before ",
"Peter Aitchison\n Aitchison remained in the Colchester area following his retirement from the game, where he worked for BT until his retirement in September 1991.",
"Barrie Central Collegiate Institute\nKayla Alexander, WNBA player with Indiana Fever ; Emily Belchos, Canadian Women's 7's Rugby Team 2013–present ; Charles Drury, first Ontario Minister of Agriculture, 1888 ; E.C. Drury, Premier of Ontario, 1919-1923 ; William Gallie, Professor of Surgery, University of Toronto ; Ron Hoggarth, former NHL Referee 1971-1994 ; Afie Jurvanen, Canadian musician - Bahamas ; Janice Laking, Mayor of Barrie 1988-2000 ; Jeff Lehman, politician, Barrie Mayor 2010–present ; Megan Lukan, rugby union player, member of Canada's Women's rugby sevens team ; Steve Myddelton, CFL player ; Taylor Paris, Professional Rugby Player, Canadian Men's 7's and 15's Rugby Player, 2010–present ; Luke Tait, Professional Rugby Player, Former, Canadian Men's 15's Rugby Player, 2005-2011 ; Bobbie Rosenfeld, 1928 Olympian (Track and Field) ",
"Len Barrie\n Leonard G. Barrie (born June 4, 1969 in Kimberley, British Columbia) is a retired professional ice hockey forward who played 184 games in the National Hockey League. He played for the Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Los Angeles Kings, and Florida Panthers. He was a co-owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, and was the president and coach of the Victoria Grizzlies of the British Columbia Hockey League.",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n George Aitchison (19 October 1864 – 25 January 1895) was a Scotland international rugby union player. He played as a halfback.",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n He was called up to the Scotland squad for the Home Nations Championship and played Ireland at Belfast on 17 February 1883."
] |
What sport does Oyanaisis Gelis play? | [
"basketball",
"hoops",
"b-ball",
"basket ball",
"BB",
"Basketball"
] | sport | Oyanaisis Gelis | 5,363,800 | 39 | [
{
"id": "30843832",
"title": "Kyriaki Liosi",
"text": " Kyriaki \"Kiki\" Liosi (Κυριακή \"Κική\" Λιόση; born October 30, 1979) is a female Greek water polo player and Olympic silver medalist with the Greek national team. She received a silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in 2004 Athens. She was the top sprinter at the 2004 Olympics, with 21 sprints won. She received a gold medal with the Greek team at the 2005 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Kirishi. Liosi participated at the 2008 Women's Water Polo Olympic Qualifier in Imperia, where Greece finished 4th and qualified for the 2008 Olympics, in Beijing. At club level, she played for Olympiacos (1998–2003), Glyfada (2003–2005) and Vouliagmeni (2005–2013).",
"score": "1.4929162"
},
{
"id": "12717975",
"title": "Panagiotis Gionis",
"text": " Panagiotis Gionis (born 7 January 1980) is a Greek table tennis player and a dentist. He is a member of the Greek National Team and has competed in 4 Olympics and many World and European Championships. He has been playing professionally in Germany and France since 2001. Currently, he is playing for German club Borussia Düsseldorf and is being sponsored by TAMASU BUTTERFLY. In May 2011, he qualified directly for the London 2012 Summer Olympics based on his ITTF world ranking. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he lost in the third round to Japan's Seiya Kishikawa. He placed 3rd in the men's single 2013 LIEBHERR European Championships and second in the team event. He is currently ranked 21st in the world and 7th in Europe. In Aug 2014 he was invited to participate in the mixed European team in the Asia-Europe All Star Challenge on ",
"score": "1.4720774"
},
{
"id": "1697153",
"title": "Gela Aprasidze",
"text": " Gela Aprasidze (born 14 January 1998) is a Georgian rugby union player who plays as a scrum-half for Montpellier in the Top 14 and the Georgia national team. He was a member of the Georgia U20 squad for the 2017 World Rugby Under 20 Championship.",
"score": "1.4613934"
},
{
"id": "15853770",
"title": "AJ Ginnis",
"text": " in Flachau, Austria. The former U.S. Ski Team athlete is now the newest member on Greece’s national team. The Hellenic Olympic team also praised the alpine skier for his great effort and contribution to the sport in Greece.U.S. Ambassador to Greece Geoffrey R. Pyatt also congratulated Ginnis, Tweeting: “Athens-born Greek-American AJ Ginnis, skiing for Flag of Greece today became the first ever Greek to win a point scoring position in @fisalpine professional competition!” The 26-year-old Greek-American skier did not have it easy in his career: he has battled five knee surgeries and a torn groin muscle before becoming successful in the ",
"score": "1.4551826"
},
{
"id": "25882661",
"title": "Nikos Zisis",
"text": " Zisis started his basketball playing career in the year 1996, playing with the junior teams of XAN Thessaloniki (English: YMCA Thessaloniki). He was with the club until 2000. The club would later go on to retire his jersey, in 2018.",
"score": "1.4519117"
},
{
"id": "8801611",
"title": "Odysseus Velanas",
"text": " Holding both Dutch and Greek citizenship, Velanas has played for the Netherlands at under-17, under-18, and under-19 level.",
"score": "1.4315159"
},
{
"id": "6378045",
"title": "Sokratis Naoumis",
"text": " Naoumis played from a young age with the youth teams of A.O. Agriniou, before he started his pro career.",
"score": "1.4273484"
},
{
"id": "25882660",
"title": "Nikos Zisis",
"text": " Nikolaos \"Nikos\" Zisis (alternate spelling: Zissis; Νικόλαος \"Νίκος\" Ζήσης; born August 16, 1983) is a Greek former professional basketball player who last played for AEK Athens of the Greek Basket League and the Basketball Champions League. At a height of 1.97 m (6'5 3⁄4\") tall, he played at both the point guard and shooting guard positions. During his senior men's playing career, Zisis won the 2008 EuroLeague championship, while a member of CSKA Moscow. Zisis also won 9 national league championships in various European domestic leagues (four Italian League titles, two Russian League titles, two German League titles, and one Greek League title). In addition to that, he also won 8 national cup titles (four Italian Cups, two German Cups, one Russian Cup, and one Greek Cup). Two of his club teams, XAN Thessaloniki and Brose Bamberg, retired his team jerseys. As a member of the senior Greek national basketball team, Zisis won the gold medal at the 2005 EuroBasket, the silver medal at the 2006 FIBA World Championship, and the bronze medal at the 2009 EuroBasket.",
"score": "1.4221466"
},
{
"id": "5080015",
"title": "Konstantinos Mourikis",
"text": " Konstantinos Mourikis (born 11 July 1988, Marousi) is a Greek water polo player. He was part of the Greek team that won the bronze medal at the 2015 World Championship and the bronze medal at the 2016 World League and 2020 World League At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Greece men's national water polo team in the men's event. He was a member of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. He plays for Greek powerhouse Olympiacos, with whom he won the 2017–18 LEN Champions League.",
"score": "1.4174547"
},
{
"id": "28863003",
"title": "Iordanis Pechlivanidis",
"text": " as a professional player was against Iraklis for the Greek championship. During the same season he played also against Kerkyra. The same year (2004) he participated in two matches as a Skoda Xanthi player in the National Cup, against Levadiakos (scoring one goal) and Atromitos. Next year (2005) he was loaned to Thraki FC (Alexandroupoli). During the 2005-2006 season he played for Kalamata F.C., while he was fulfilling his military obligations. In the first half of 2007-2008 he played for Thraki FC (Alexandroupoli) and in the second half he played for Olympiakos Volou. In the first half of 2008-2009 he played for Eolikos FC (Mytilini) and in the second half for Echinos Sport (Xanthi). In 2009-2010 season he played for the team Anagennisi Giannitsa F.C.. In 2010, he joined Anagennisi Epanomi F.C. in Football League 2 (Greece).",
"score": "1.4139576"
},
{
"id": "4791389",
"title": "Dean Gardikiotis",
"text": " Odysseas Dean Gardikiotis (Οδυσσέας Ντιν Γαρδικιώτης; born 9 September 1994) is an Australian-born Greek professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper.",
"score": "1.4123675"
},
{
"id": "30843416",
"title": "Evangelia Moraitidou",
"text": " Evangelia Moraitidou (born March 26, 1975) is a female Greek water polo player and Olympic silver medalist with the Greek national team. She received a silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in 2004 Athens. She received a gold medal with the Greek team at the 2005 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Kirishi, and a bronze medal at the 2007 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Montreal, where she scored 18 goals and ranked 5th on the scoring list. She participated at the 2008 Women's Water Polo Olympic Qualifier in Imperia, where Greece finished 4th and qualified for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.",
"score": "1.4118769"
},
{
"id": "918226",
"title": "Meleti Ross Melehes",
"text": " Meleti Ross Melehes (born 7 January 1977 in Guelph, Ontario) is a Greek baseball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics. He played for the London Werewolves of the Frontier League in 1999. His 3.00 ERA led all Greek team pitchers with 3+ innings in the Athens Games.",
"score": "1.4117203"
},
{
"id": "12728637",
"title": "Ioannis Bourousis",
"text": " Bourousis originally began his athletic career training to be a professional swimmer, but he grew too tall for the sport, and so he instead took up playing basketball, at the age of 18. He began playing basketball as a member of the youth clubs of G.S. Karditsas.",
"score": "1.4072547"
},
{
"id": "25882662",
"title": "Nikos Zisis",
"text": " At the age of 17, Zisis moved to Athens, and to the Greek League team AEK, where he began his professional basketball career. With AEK, he won the Greek Cup in 2001, and also the Greek League championship, in 2002. He also won the Greek League Best Young Player award in 2002. He then moved to Treviso, Italy, and played on the Italian League team Benetton Treviso. With Treviso, he won the Italian Super Cup and the Italian League championship in the year 2006, and also the Italian Cup in the year 2007. He then left Italy, and moved to Moscow, Russia.",
"score": "1.406888"
},
{
"id": "32743707",
"title": "Michalis Kakiouzis",
"text": " Kakiouzis began playing basketball at the age of 8, with the youth academies of Ionikos NF, in Greece.",
"score": "1.4068067"
},
{
"id": "25882668",
"title": "Nikos Zisis",
"text": " As a member of the senior men's Greek national basketball team, Zisis won the gold medal at the 2005 EuroBasket, which was held in Serbia and Montenegro. He was Greece's leading scorer during the tournament, averaging 10.6 points per game. At the end of the semifinal game against the French national basketball team, Zisis drove the length of the court, drove into the middle of the floor, drew a double team, and then dished the ball out to Dimitris Diamantidis, who hit a game-winning 3 pointer. After his great performance at the EuroBasket in 2005, Zisis was named the FIBA ",
"score": "1.4055126"
},
{
"id": "4738280",
"title": "Christos Melissis",
"text": " Christos Melissis, (born 1 December 1982) is a Greek football player who played for Sudanese club Al-Hilal Omdurman. He has played in the past for Naoussa, Panserraikos, PAOK, Panathinaikos, Larissa, Panthrakikos, Marítimo in Portugal and the Greek national football team. He usually plays as a center back but when called upon he is used as a right back or a defensive midfielder.",
"score": "1.4052007"
},
{
"id": "25882671",
"title": "Nikos Zisis",
"text": " 2004 Summer Olympics, where Greece finished in 5th place in the world, and at the 2008 Summer Olympics, where Greece also finished in 5th place in the world. He also played at the following tournaments: the 2009 EuroBasket, where he won a bronze medal, the 2010 FIBA World Championship, the 2011 EuroBasket, the 2012 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the 2013 EuroBasket, the 2014 FIBA World Cup, and the 2015 EuroBasket. In 2019, the Hellenic Basketball Federation honored Zisis, in recognition of his contributions to the senior Greek national basketball team, with which he had 189 caps (games played).",
"score": "1.4038095"
},
{
"id": "3447335",
"title": "Ioannis Sachpatzidis",
"text": " Sachpatzidis played minor league level basketball with X.A.N. Thessaloniki, until he joined the Rethymno Cretan Kings of the Greek top-tier level Greek Basket League. The same year, he was loaned to Irakleio of the Greek B League (Greek 3rd Division), where he averaged almost 10 points per game. The following season, he joined Pagrati of the Greek A2 League (Greek 2nd Division), where he was coached by Dinos Kalampakos. On August 18, 2016, he joined Koroivos Amaliadas of the Greek Basket League, where he eventually became the team captain. The following season, he renewed his contract until 2018. In 2018, he joined the Greek A2 League club Ionikos Nikaias. On July 18, 2020, Sachpatzidis joined Charilaos Trikoupis of the Greek A2 League. With Trikoupis, he gained the promotion to the Greek Basket League, while leading the division in blocks. He renewed his contract with the club until 2021. On July 15, 2021, Sachpatzidis moved to Larisa.",
"score": "1.4036574"
}
] | [
"Kyriaki Liosi\n Kyriaki \"Kiki\" Liosi (Κυριακή \"Κική\" Λιόση; born October 30, 1979) is a female Greek water polo player and Olympic silver medalist with the Greek national team. She received a silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in 2004 Athens. She was the top sprinter at the 2004 Olympics, with 21 sprints won. She received a gold medal with the Greek team at the 2005 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Kirishi. Liosi participated at the 2008 Women's Water Polo Olympic Qualifier in Imperia, where Greece finished 4th and qualified for the 2008 Olympics, in Beijing. At club level, she played for Olympiacos (1998–2003), Glyfada (2003–2005) and Vouliagmeni (2005–2013).",
"Panagiotis Gionis\n Panagiotis Gionis (born 7 January 1980) is a Greek table tennis player and a dentist. He is a member of the Greek National Team and has competed in 4 Olympics and many World and European Championships. He has been playing professionally in Germany and France since 2001. Currently, he is playing for German club Borussia Düsseldorf and is being sponsored by TAMASU BUTTERFLY. In May 2011, he qualified directly for the London 2012 Summer Olympics based on his ITTF world ranking. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he lost in the third round to Japan's Seiya Kishikawa. He placed 3rd in the men's single 2013 LIEBHERR European Championships and second in the team event. He is currently ranked 21st in the world and 7th in Europe. In Aug 2014 he was invited to participate in the mixed European team in the Asia-Europe All Star Challenge on ",
"Gela Aprasidze\n Gela Aprasidze (born 14 January 1998) is a Georgian rugby union player who plays as a scrum-half for Montpellier in the Top 14 and the Georgia national team. He was a member of the Georgia U20 squad for the 2017 World Rugby Under 20 Championship.",
"AJ Ginnis\n in Flachau, Austria. The former U.S. Ski Team athlete is now the newest member on Greece’s national team. The Hellenic Olympic team also praised the alpine skier for his great effort and contribution to the sport in Greece.U.S. Ambassador to Greece Geoffrey R. Pyatt also congratulated Ginnis, Tweeting: “Athens-born Greek-American AJ Ginnis, skiing for Flag of Greece today became the first ever Greek to win a point scoring position in @fisalpine professional competition!” The 26-year-old Greek-American skier did not have it easy in his career: he has battled five knee surgeries and a torn groin muscle before becoming successful in the ",
"Nikos Zisis\n Zisis started his basketball playing career in the year 1996, playing with the junior teams of XAN Thessaloniki (English: YMCA Thessaloniki). He was with the club until 2000. The club would later go on to retire his jersey, in 2018.",
"Odysseus Velanas\n Holding both Dutch and Greek citizenship, Velanas has played for the Netherlands at under-17, under-18, and under-19 level.",
"Sokratis Naoumis\n Naoumis played from a young age with the youth teams of A.O. Agriniou, before he started his pro career.",
"Nikos Zisis\n Nikolaos \"Nikos\" Zisis (alternate spelling: Zissis; Νικόλαος \"Νίκος\" Ζήσης; born August 16, 1983) is a Greek former professional basketball player who last played for AEK Athens of the Greek Basket League and the Basketball Champions League. At a height of 1.97 m (6'5 3⁄4\") tall, he played at both the point guard and shooting guard positions. During his senior men's playing career, Zisis won the 2008 EuroLeague championship, while a member of CSKA Moscow. Zisis also won 9 national league championships in various European domestic leagues (four Italian League titles, two Russian League titles, two German League titles, and one Greek League title). In addition to that, he also won 8 national cup titles (four Italian Cups, two German Cups, one Russian Cup, and one Greek Cup). Two of his club teams, XAN Thessaloniki and Brose Bamberg, retired his team jerseys. As a member of the senior Greek national basketball team, Zisis won the gold medal at the 2005 EuroBasket, the silver medal at the 2006 FIBA World Championship, and the bronze medal at the 2009 EuroBasket.",
"Konstantinos Mourikis\n Konstantinos Mourikis (born 11 July 1988, Marousi) is a Greek water polo player. He was part of the Greek team that won the bronze medal at the 2015 World Championship and the bronze medal at the 2016 World League and 2020 World League At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Greece men's national water polo team in the men's event. He was a member of the team that competed for Greece at the 2016 Summer Olympics. They finished in 6th place. He plays for Greek powerhouse Olympiacos, with whom he won the 2017–18 LEN Champions League.",
"Iordanis Pechlivanidis\n as a professional player was against Iraklis for the Greek championship. During the same season he played also against Kerkyra. The same year (2004) he participated in two matches as a Skoda Xanthi player in the National Cup, against Levadiakos (scoring one goal) and Atromitos. Next year (2005) he was loaned to Thraki FC (Alexandroupoli). During the 2005-2006 season he played for Kalamata F.C., while he was fulfilling his military obligations. In the first half of 2007-2008 he played for Thraki FC (Alexandroupoli) and in the second half he played for Olympiakos Volou. In the first half of 2008-2009 he played for Eolikos FC (Mytilini) and in the second half for Echinos Sport (Xanthi). In 2009-2010 season he played for the team Anagennisi Giannitsa F.C.. In 2010, he joined Anagennisi Epanomi F.C. in Football League 2 (Greece).",
"Dean Gardikiotis\n Odysseas Dean Gardikiotis (Οδυσσέας Ντιν Γαρδικιώτης; born 9 September 1994) is an Australian-born Greek professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper.",
"Evangelia Moraitidou\n Evangelia Moraitidou (born March 26, 1975) is a female Greek water polo player and Olympic silver medalist with the Greek national team. She received a silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in 2004 Athens. She received a gold medal with the Greek team at the 2005 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Kirishi, and a bronze medal at the 2007 FINA Women's Water Polo World League in Montreal, where she scored 18 goals and ranked 5th on the scoring list. She participated at the 2008 Women's Water Polo Olympic Qualifier in Imperia, where Greece finished 4th and qualified for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.",
"Meleti Ross Melehes\n Meleti Ross Melehes (born 7 January 1977 in Guelph, Ontario) is a Greek baseball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics. He played for the London Werewolves of the Frontier League in 1999. His 3.00 ERA led all Greek team pitchers with 3+ innings in the Athens Games.",
"Ioannis Bourousis\n Bourousis originally began his athletic career training to be a professional swimmer, but he grew too tall for the sport, and so he instead took up playing basketball, at the age of 18. He began playing basketball as a member of the youth clubs of G.S. Karditsas.",
"Nikos Zisis\n At the age of 17, Zisis moved to Athens, and to the Greek League team AEK, where he began his professional basketball career. With AEK, he won the Greek Cup in 2001, and also the Greek League championship, in 2002. He also won the Greek League Best Young Player award in 2002. He then moved to Treviso, Italy, and played on the Italian League team Benetton Treviso. With Treviso, he won the Italian Super Cup and the Italian League championship in the year 2006, and also the Italian Cup in the year 2007. He then left Italy, and moved to Moscow, Russia.",
"Michalis Kakiouzis\n Kakiouzis began playing basketball at the age of 8, with the youth academies of Ionikos NF, in Greece.",
"Nikos Zisis\n As a member of the senior men's Greek national basketball team, Zisis won the gold medal at the 2005 EuroBasket, which was held in Serbia and Montenegro. He was Greece's leading scorer during the tournament, averaging 10.6 points per game. At the end of the semifinal game against the French national basketball team, Zisis drove the length of the court, drove into the middle of the floor, drew a double team, and then dished the ball out to Dimitris Diamantidis, who hit a game-winning 3 pointer. After his great performance at the EuroBasket in 2005, Zisis was named the FIBA ",
"Christos Melissis\n Christos Melissis, (born 1 December 1982) is a Greek football player who played for Sudanese club Al-Hilal Omdurman. He has played in the past for Naoussa, Panserraikos, PAOK, Panathinaikos, Larissa, Panthrakikos, Marítimo in Portugal and the Greek national football team. He usually plays as a center back but when called upon he is used as a right back or a defensive midfielder.",
"Nikos Zisis\n 2004 Summer Olympics, where Greece finished in 5th place in the world, and at the 2008 Summer Olympics, where Greece also finished in 5th place in the world. He also played at the following tournaments: the 2009 EuroBasket, where he won a bronze medal, the 2010 FIBA World Championship, the 2011 EuroBasket, the 2012 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the 2013 EuroBasket, the 2014 FIBA World Cup, and the 2015 EuroBasket. In 2019, the Hellenic Basketball Federation honored Zisis, in recognition of his contributions to the senior Greek national basketball team, with which he had 189 caps (games played).",
"Ioannis Sachpatzidis\n Sachpatzidis played minor league level basketball with X.A.N. Thessaloniki, until he joined the Rethymno Cretan Kings of the Greek top-tier level Greek Basket League. The same year, he was loaned to Irakleio of the Greek B League (Greek 3rd Division), where he averaged almost 10 points per game. The following season, he joined Pagrati of the Greek A2 League (Greek 2nd Division), where he was coached by Dinos Kalampakos. On August 18, 2016, he joined Koroivos Amaliadas of the Greek Basket League, where he eventually became the team captain. The following season, he renewed his contract until 2018. In 2018, he joined the Greek A2 League club Ionikos Nikaias. On July 18, 2020, Sachpatzidis joined Charilaos Trikoupis of the Greek A2 League. With Trikoupis, he gained the promotion to the Greek Basket League, while leading the division in blocks. He renewed his contract with the club until 2021. On July 15, 2021, Sachpatzidis moved to Larisa."
] |
Who is the author of Afternoon? | [
"Ouida",
"Marie Louise de la Ramée",
"Marie Louise Ramé",
"Marie Louise de la Ramee",
"Marie Louise Rame"
] | author | Afternoon (play) | 3,237,496 | 52 | [
{
"id": "27905773",
"title": "Afternoon, a story",
"text": " afternoon, a story, spelled with a lowercase 'a', is a work of electronic literature written in 1987 by American author Michael Joyce. It was published by Eastgate Systems in 1990 and is known as one of the first works of hypertext fiction. afternoon was first offered to the public as a demonstration of the hypertext authoring system Storyspace, announced in 1987 at the first Association for Computing Machinery Hypertext conference in a paper by Michael Joyce and Jay David Bolter. In 1990, it was published on diskette and distributed in the same form by Eastgate Systems. It was followed by a series of other Storyspace hypertext fictions, including Stuart Moulthrop's Victory Garden, Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl and Deena Larsen's Marble Springs. Eastgate continues to publish the work in the 2010s and distributes it on a USB flash drive.",
"score": "1.7633901"
},
{
"id": "27905775",
"title": "Afternoon, a story",
"text": " This is a highly discussed work of electronic literature since it was one of the first electronic interactive novels, therefore many articles have been written about it. Espen J. Aarseth devotes a chapter of his book Cybertext to afternoon, calling it a classic example of modernist literature. It is more often thought of as a work of Postmodern literature, as evidenced by its inclusion in the Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Fiction. Chapters of Jay David Bolter's Writing Space and J. Yellowlees Douglas's The End of Books or Books Without End also discuss afternoon, as does Matthew G. Kirschenbaum's Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination. Gunnar Liestøl's article \"Wittgenstein, Genette, and the Reader's Narrative in Hypertext\" in George Landow's Hyper/Text/Theory (1994) uses the theory of narratology to understand afternoon and Anna Gunders's dissertation work.",
"score": "1.634754"
},
{
"id": "13289022",
"title": "The Blue Afternoon",
"text": " The Blue Afternoon (1993) is a novel by William Boyd. It won the Sunday Express Book of the Year in the year of its publication and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction.",
"score": "1.6309922"
},
{
"id": "13289048",
"title": "The Blue Afternoon",
"text": "The Blue Afternoon, William Boyd, Penguin Books, 1993 ; William Boyd discusses the idea of the maxim 'write what you know' in relation to his own writing ",
"score": "1.6009378"
},
{
"id": "32884691",
"title": "List of electronic literature authors, critics, and works",
"text": "Afternoon, a story (1987, 1990) ; Victory Garden (1992) ; Patchwork Girl (1995) ; The Imaginary 20th Century (2016) ; Poesie Elettroniche (2016) ; Notes Toward Absolute Zero (1995) ; Déprise (2010) ; Figurski at Findhorn on Acid (2001, 2021) ",
"score": "1.5791354"
},
{
"id": "5075332",
"title": "Gabriela Adameșteanu",
"text": " Gabriela Adameșteanu (born April 2, 1942) is a Romanian novelist, short story writer, essayist, journalist, and translator. The author of the celebrated novels The Equal Way of Every Day (1975) and Wasted Morning (1983), she is also known as an activist in support of civil society and member of the Group for Social Dialogue (GDS), as well as editor of Revista 22.",
"score": "1.5282683"
},
{
"id": "13660930",
"title": "Tell Me Another Morning",
"text": " Tell Me Another Morning is an autobiographical novel by Zdena Berger, a survivor of Holocaust camps at Theresienstadt, Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. Berger began writing the book in 1955 after coming to North America and in 1961 she published the work through Harper & Brothers. The work went out of print shortly thereafter but was reissued in 2007 through Paris Press. The book depicts the experiences of Tania Andersova, a teenage girl who is taken away to the Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. Tell Me Another Morning was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award for Women's Studies in 2007.",
"score": "1.5008483"
},
{
"id": "27905774",
"title": "Afternoon, a story",
"text": " The hypertext fiction tells the story of Peter, a recently divorced man who witnessed a car crash. Hours later, he suspects that the wrecked car may have involved his ex-wife and their son. The plot may change each time it is read if the reader chooses different paths.",
"score": "1.4892904"
},
{
"id": "26601812",
"title": "Anthony Powell",
"text": " Powell's first novel, Afternoon Men, was published by Duckworth in 1931, with Powell supervising its production himself. The same firm published his next three novels, two of them after Powell had left the firm. During his time in California, Powell contributed several articles to the magazine Night and Day, edited by Graham Greene. Powell wrote a few more occasional pieces for the magazine until it ceased publication in March 1938. Powell completed his fifth novel, What's Become of Waring, in late 1938 or early 1939. After being turned down by Duckworth, it was published by Cassell in March of that year. The ",
"score": "1.4797411"
},
{
"id": "6627172",
"title": "Afternoon of the Elves",
"text": " Afternoon of the Elves is a 1989 adolescent novel by author Janet Taylor Lisle. Afternoon of the Elves was a Newbery Medal Honor Book in 1990.",
"score": "1.4782777"
},
{
"id": "4260756",
"title": "Morning, Noon and Night (novel)",
"text": " Morning, Noon and Night is a 1995 novel by Sidney Sheldon.",
"score": "1.4667578"
},
{
"id": "925613",
"title": "Bonnie Zindel",
"text": " She is the author of the Young Adult novels Dr. Adriana Earthlight, Student Shrink, Hollywood Dream Machine, and A Star for the Latecomer published by HarperCollins and Viking Press. A Star for the Latecomer was co-written with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Paul Zindel and was selected as a Best Young Adult Book, American Library Association, 1971. The novels have earned a place in '80's Teen Book Pop Culture. Her play I Am A Zoo was produced by the Jewish Repretory Theater in New York City and is included in New Jewish Voices: Plays Produced by the Jewish Repertory Theatre edited by Edward M. Cohen. A production of her short play Lemons in the Morning (1983) co-written with Paul Zindel was performed at the Back Alley Theatre in an evening called 24 Hours - AM. The play starred Emmy Award-winning actress Doris Roberts and Alan Oppenheimer.",
"score": "1.4657335"
},
{
"id": "25176957",
"title": "Michael Joyce (writer)",
"text": " Michael Joyce (born 1945) is a retired professor of English at Vassar College, New York, US. He is also an important author and critic of electronic literature. Joyce's afternoon, a story, 1987, was among the first literary works of hypertext fiction to present itself as undeniably serious literature, and experimented with the short-story form in novel ways. It was created with the then-new Storyspace software, deployed the ambiguity and dubious narrator characteristic of high modernism, along with some suspense and romance elements, in a story whose meaning could change dramatically depending on the path taken through its lexias on each reading. For instance, a hard-to-find series of lexias presented a new set of facts about the narrator's actions which affects the reader's judgment of the narrator. In The New York Times, Robert Coover called afternoon \"the granddaddy of hypertext fictions\", while ",
"score": "1.4588008"
},
{
"id": "30112191",
"title": "Afternoon Delight (film)",
"text": " Afternoon Delight is a 2013 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Joey Soloway. It stars Kathryn Hahn, Juno Temple, Josh Radnor, and Jane Lynch.",
"score": "1.4384179"
},
{
"id": "16151692",
"title": "Secrets of the Morning",
"text": " Secrets of the Morning is a novel written by V. C. Andrews in 1991. It is the second novel in the Cutler series.",
"score": "1.4295058"
},
{
"id": "8946308",
"title": "Morning and Noon",
"text": " Morning and Noon: A Memoir is an autobiographical book written by former United States Secretary of State Dean Acheson in 1965. In it Acheson describes the meaningful times and events of his early life — from his birth in 1893 up to the time of his swearing in as the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs on February 1, 1941. In his \"Introduction\", the author explains that this book is about the significant moments of his early life and career, but that there are gaps in the history, which he explains as being from the parts of his life that were either uninteresting, too painful to recall, or too personal to share. As to where he ended the narrative in this book, he referred to that time as the middle of his middle age when a \"sea change\" was occurring between him and the events around him. As the title implied, he intended to continue his story in subsequent works.",
"score": "1.4291267"
},
{
"id": "25451617",
"title": "Roland Merullo",
"text": " Roland Merullo (born September 19, 1953) is an American author who writes novels, essays and memoir. His best-known works are the novels Breakfast with Buddha, In Revere, In Those Days, A Little Love Story, Revere Beach Boulevard and the memoir Revere Beach Elegy. His books have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Korean, German, Chinese, Turkish, Bulgarian, Croatian, Slovenian, Czech and Italian.",
"score": "1.4207993"
},
{
"id": "30782460",
"title": "Leslie Waller",
"text": " Leslie Waller with his co-author Arnold Drake are credited with having written the first graphic novel, It Rhymes with Lust. It was their idea to pitch a new idea, the \"picture novel\", a bridge between comic books and \"book books\", to St John, the publisher who released It Rhymes with Lust. Originally published in 1950, the graphic novel was rereleased by Dark Horse Comics in the Spring of 2007. His trilogy, The Banker, The Family, and The American garnered recognition, landing the last title on The New York Times bestseller list. Waller became known as a go-to man for novelizations and produced the novels for Dog Day Afternoon (under the pseudonym Patrick Mann), Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Hide in Plain Sight.",
"score": "1.4203768"
},
{
"id": "30277767",
"title": "Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival",
"text": " Fred Luskin, author of Forgive to Love ; Shana Mahaffey, author of Sounds Like Crazy ; Irshad Manji, author of The Trouble with Islam Today ; Frank McCourt, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Angela's Ashes ; Greg Mortenson, activist, Nobel Peace Prize finalist, and author of Three Cups of Tea ; Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor ; P. J. O'Rourke, journalist, author, satirist, regular correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, The American Spectator, and The Weekly Standard, and frequent panelist on National Public Radio's game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! ; Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma ; Frank Portman, author of King ",
"score": "1.4201488"
},
{
"id": "25799006",
"title": "A Ride into Morning",
"text": " A Ride into Morning is a historical novel by Ann Rinaldi about the legend surrounding Tempe Wick, one of America's most famous heroines. It is part of the Great Episodes series. It is told in first-person narration.",
"score": "1.4185805"
}
] | [
"Afternoon, a story\n afternoon, a story, spelled with a lowercase 'a', is a work of electronic literature written in 1987 by American author Michael Joyce. It was published by Eastgate Systems in 1990 and is known as one of the first works of hypertext fiction. afternoon was first offered to the public as a demonstration of the hypertext authoring system Storyspace, announced in 1987 at the first Association for Computing Machinery Hypertext conference in a paper by Michael Joyce and Jay David Bolter. In 1990, it was published on diskette and distributed in the same form by Eastgate Systems. It was followed by a series of other Storyspace hypertext fictions, including Stuart Moulthrop's Victory Garden, Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl and Deena Larsen's Marble Springs. Eastgate continues to publish the work in the 2010s and distributes it on a USB flash drive.",
"Afternoon, a story\n This is a highly discussed work of electronic literature since it was one of the first electronic interactive novels, therefore many articles have been written about it. Espen J. Aarseth devotes a chapter of his book Cybertext to afternoon, calling it a classic example of modernist literature. It is more often thought of as a work of Postmodern literature, as evidenced by its inclusion in the Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Fiction. Chapters of Jay David Bolter's Writing Space and J. Yellowlees Douglas's The End of Books or Books Without End also discuss afternoon, as does Matthew G. Kirschenbaum's Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination. Gunnar Liestøl's article \"Wittgenstein, Genette, and the Reader's Narrative in Hypertext\" in George Landow's Hyper/Text/Theory (1994) uses the theory of narratology to understand afternoon and Anna Gunders's dissertation work.",
"The Blue Afternoon\n The Blue Afternoon (1993) is a novel by William Boyd. It won the Sunday Express Book of the Year in the year of its publication and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction.",
"The Blue Afternoon\nThe Blue Afternoon, William Boyd, Penguin Books, 1993 ; William Boyd discusses the idea of the maxim 'write what you know' in relation to his own writing ",
"List of electronic literature authors, critics, and works\nAfternoon, a story (1987, 1990) ; Victory Garden (1992) ; Patchwork Girl (1995) ; The Imaginary 20th Century (2016) ; Poesie Elettroniche (2016) ; Notes Toward Absolute Zero (1995) ; Déprise (2010) ; Figurski at Findhorn on Acid (2001, 2021) ",
"Gabriela Adameșteanu\n Gabriela Adameșteanu (born April 2, 1942) is a Romanian novelist, short story writer, essayist, journalist, and translator. The author of the celebrated novels The Equal Way of Every Day (1975) and Wasted Morning (1983), she is also known as an activist in support of civil society and member of the Group for Social Dialogue (GDS), as well as editor of Revista 22.",
"Tell Me Another Morning\n Tell Me Another Morning is an autobiographical novel by Zdena Berger, a survivor of Holocaust camps at Theresienstadt, Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. Berger began writing the book in 1955 after coming to North America and in 1961 she published the work through Harper & Brothers. The work went out of print shortly thereafter but was reissued in 2007 through Paris Press. The book depicts the experiences of Tania Andersova, a teenage girl who is taken away to the Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. Tell Me Another Morning was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award for Women's Studies in 2007.",
"Afternoon, a story\n The hypertext fiction tells the story of Peter, a recently divorced man who witnessed a car crash. Hours later, he suspects that the wrecked car may have involved his ex-wife and their son. The plot may change each time it is read if the reader chooses different paths.",
"Anthony Powell\n Powell's first novel, Afternoon Men, was published by Duckworth in 1931, with Powell supervising its production himself. The same firm published his next three novels, two of them after Powell had left the firm. During his time in California, Powell contributed several articles to the magazine Night and Day, edited by Graham Greene. Powell wrote a few more occasional pieces for the magazine until it ceased publication in March 1938. Powell completed his fifth novel, What's Become of Waring, in late 1938 or early 1939. After being turned down by Duckworth, it was published by Cassell in March of that year. The ",
"Afternoon of the Elves\n Afternoon of the Elves is a 1989 adolescent novel by author Janet Taylor Lisle. Afternoon of the Elves was a Newbery Medal Honor Book in 1990.",
"Morning, Noon and Night (novel)\n Morning, Noon and Night is a 1995 novel by Sidney Sheldon.",
"Bonnie Zindel\n She is the author of the Young Adult novels Dr. Adriana Earthlight, Student Shrink, Hollywood Dream Machine, and A Star for the Latecomer published by HarperCollins and Viking Press. A Star for the Latecomer was co-written with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Paul Zindel and was selected as a Best Young Adult Book, American Library Association, 1971. The novels have earned a place in '80's Teen Book Pop Culture. Her play I Am A Zoo was produced by the Jewish Repretory Theater in New York City and is included in New Jewish Voices: Plays Produced by the Jewish Repertory Theatre edited by Edward M. Cohen. A production of her short play Lemons in the Morning (1983) co-written with Paul Zindel was performed at the Back Alley Theatre in an evening called 24 Hours - AM. The play starred Emmy Award-winning actress Doris Roberts and Alan Oppenheimer.",
"Michael Joyce (writer)\n Michael Joyce (born 1945) is a retired professor of English at Vassar College, New York, US. He is also an important author and critic of electronic literature. Joyce's afternoon, a story, 1987, was among the first literary works of hypertext fiction to present itself as undeniably serious literature, and experimented with the short-story form in novel ways. It was created with the then-new Storyspace software, deployed the ambiguity and dubious narrator characteristic of high modernism, along with some suspense and romance elements, in a story whose meaning could change dramatically depending on the path taken through its lexias on each reading. For instance, a hard-to-find series of lexias presented a new set of facts about the narrator's actions which affects the reader's judgment of the narrator. In The New York Times, Robert Coover called afternoon \"the granddaddy of hypertext fictions\", while ",
"Afternoon Delight (film)\n Afternoon Delight is a 2013 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Joey Soloway. It stars Kathryn Hahn, Juno Temple, Josh Radnor, and Jane Lynch.",
"Secrets of the Morning\n Secrets of the Morning is a novel written by V. C. Andrews in 1991. It is the second novel in the Cutler series.",
"Morning and Noon\n Morning and Noon: A Memoir is an autobiographical book written by former United States Secretary of State Dean Acheson in 1965. In it Acheson describes the meaningful times and events of his early life — from his birth in 1893 up to the time of his swearing in as the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs on February 1, 1941. In his \"Introduction\", the author explains that this book is about the significant moments of his early life and career, but that there are gaps in the history, which he explains as being from the parts of his life that were either uninteresting, too painful to recall, or too personal to share. As to where he ended the narrative in this book, he referred to that time as the middle of his middle age when a \"sea change\" was occurring between him and the events around him. As the title implied, he intended to continue his story in subsequent works.",
"Roland Merullo\n Roland Merullo (born September 19, 1953) is an American author who writes novels, essays and memoir. His best-known works are the novels Breakfast with Buddha, In Revere, In Those Days, A Little Love Story, Revere Beach Boulevard and the memoir Revere Beach Elegy. His books have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Korean, German, Chinese, Turkish, Bulgarian, Croatian, Slovenian, Czech and Italian.",
"Leslie Waller\n Leslie Waller with his co-author Arnold Drake are credited with having written the first graphic novel, It Rhymes with Lust. It was their idea to pitch a new idea, the \"picture novel\", a bridge between comic books and \"book books\", to St John, the publisher who released It Rhymes with Lust. Originally published in 1950, the graphic novel was rereleased by Dark Horse Comics in the Spring of 2007. His trilogy, The Banker, The Family, and The American garnered recognition, landing the last title on The New York Times bestseller list. Waller became known as a go-to man for novelizations and produced the novels for Dog Day Afternoon (under the pseudonym Patrick Mann), Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Hide in Plain Sight.",
"Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival\n Fred Luskin, author of Forgive to Love ; Shana Mahaffey, author of Sounds Like Crazy ; Irshad Manji, author of The Trouble with Islam Today ; Frank McCourt, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Angela's Ashes ; Greg Mortenson, activist, Nobel Peace Prize finalist, and author of Three Cups of Tea ; Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor ; P. J. O'Rourke, journalist, author, satirist, regular correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, The American Spectator, and The Weekly Standard, and frequent panelist on National Public Radio's game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! ; Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma ; Frank Portman, author of King ",
"A Ride into Morning\n A Ride into Morning is a historical novel by Ann Rinaldi about the legend surrounding Tempe Wick, one of America's most famous heroines. It is part of the Great Episodes series. It is told in first-person narration."
] |
Who is the author of Bed? | [
"Tao Lin"
] | author | Bed (short story collection) | 3,465,016 | 88 | [
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.5376217"
},
{
"id": "15705642",
"title": "Wendy Rawlings",
"text": " third book, Time for Bed, was published by Louisiana State University Press in 2019. In addition, Rawlings has published short fiction, essays, and criticism in a variety of journals, including AGNI, The Atlantic, Cincinnati Review, Crab Orchard Review, Fourth Genre, Massachusetts Review, The Normal School, Passages North, The Southern Review, Sonora Review, and Tin House. Born in Washington D.C. in 1967, Rawlings grew up in Bayville, New York. She received a B.A. from Trinity College (1988), an M.F.A. from Colorado State University (1996), and a Ph.D. from The University of Utah (2000). She has taught creative writing and literature at The University of Alabama since 2000, and lives in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.",
"score": "1.5232155"
},
{
"id": "11673821",
"title": "Time for Bed",
"text": " Time for Bed is a 1996 novel by David Baddiel (ISBN: 978-0751519785).",
"score": "1.4847331"
},
{
"id": "31971063",
"title": "Bed, Bed, Bed",
"text": " Bed, Bed, Bed is a book and EP package for children released by the musical group They Might Be Giants in 2003 (see 2003 in music) through Simon & Schuster. The book is composed of the lyrics of the four songs on the album, with illustrations by Marcel Dzama. The song \"Bed, Bed, Bed, Bed, Bed\" is a slower, quieter version of the song \"Bed, Bed, Bed\" from the album No!",
"score": "1.458456"
},
{
"id": "6565356",
"title": "Self-publishing",
"text": " for the catchy subtitle of \"A new way of getting children to sleep\". He released it on CreateSpace and it became a bestseller. ; Erotic romance author Meredith Wild sold 1.4 million digital and print copies of her books, and founded her own publishing company called Waterhouse Press; she founded the firm in part because she felt that her novels were \"not being taken seriously\" as an indie author. An advantage of having her own imprint is that it is easier to get books into chainstores and big-box retailers. The breakout hit Wool by Hugh Howey was self-published originally and garnered more than a million dollars in royalty monies, and has generated over 5000 Amazon reviews. ; James Altucher's ",
"score": "1.4538488"
},
{
"id": "10076067",
"title": "While the Patient Slept (novel)",
"text": " The novel was first published in the United States by Doubleday, Doran & Company and in England by William Heinemann. It was most recently available in paperback through the University of Nebraska Press in a 1995 edition that features an introduction by Jay Fultz.",
"score": "1.4522502"
},
{
"id": "10136142",
"title": "Good in Bed",
"text": " Good In Bed is the debut novel of Jennifer Weiner. It tells the story of an overweight Jewish female journalist, her love and work life and her emotional abuse issues with her father. The novel was a New York Times Best Seller and is currently being adapted into a film produced by and starring Mindy Kaling for HBO Max. Aspects of the plot were inspired by Weiner's own life.",
"score": "1.4334667"
},
{
"id": "14484474",
"title": "Laurence Janifer",
"text": "The Bed and I!, Intimate Books, 1962. ; Faithful for Eight Hours, Beacon Press, 1963. ",
"score": "1.4094491"
},
{
"id": "7856854",
"title": "Bruce Bauman",
"text": " Bruce Bauman is an American writer. He is the author of the novels Broken Sleep (2015) and And The Word Was (2006). His work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Salon, BOMB, Bookforum, Dart International Magazine, and Black Clock. He has previously been awarded the City of Los Angeles Award in literature (2008-2009), a Durfee Foundation grant, and an UNESCO/Aschberg award.",
"score": "1.4038143"
},
{
"id": "31971064",
"title": "Bed, Bed, Bed",
"text": "Simon & Schuster, 2003, Books & CD, ISBN: 0-7432-5024-9 ",
"score": "1.401655"
},
{
"id": "28892232",
"title": "Kathy Lette",
"text": " Imogen Edwards-Jones, Lette edited an anthology by prominent women writers of erotic short-stories, In Bed with... (2009), including contributions from Louise Doughty, Esther Freud, Ali Smith, Joan Smith, Rachel Johnson and Fay Weldon, each publishing under a pseudonym. In April 2009, she contributed to the fourth issue of the literary magazine Notes from the Underground with a piece honouring her close friend John Mortimer. In November 2009, she received an honorary doctorate from Southampton Solent University. She teamed with Radox to write a water-resistant book, which was released free online in September 2009, with an aim to encourage women to be selfish with their time.",
"score": "1.3993008"
},
{
"id": "30414899",
"title": "Julie Markes",
"text": " Shhhhh! Everybody's Sleeping (ISBN: 0060537906) is a bedtime story that discusses fictional bedtimes for people of different professions (farmer, baker, etc.) It was published by HarperCollins in 2004. The book was selected by School Library Journal as a Best Book of 2005. It was also named one of Scholastic's \"Best Before-Bed Read-Alouds\".",
"score": "1.3976467"
},
{
"id": "33162057",
"title": "Bed (Joel Corry, Raye and David Guetta song)",
"text": " \"Bed\" is a song by English DJ Joel Corry, English singer Raye and French DJ David Guetta. It was released as a single on 26 February 2021, through Perfect Havoc and Asylum Records UK. The song was written by Corry, Raye, Guetta, Giorgio Tuinfort, Jin Jin, Lewis Thompson and Neave Applebaum. The song was certified platinum on 23rd July 2021.",
"score": "1.3958015"
},
{
"id": "29917230",
"title": "Clive Sinclair (author)",
"text": " Clive John Sinclair (19 February 1948 – 5 March 2018) was a British author who published several award-winning novels and collections of short stories, including The Lady with the Laptop and Bedbugs.",
"score": "1.3933966"
},
{
"id": "31670959",
"title": "The Bedwetter",
"text": " The book was released on April 20, which is a \"day of celebration for marijuana users\" as well as the birthday of Adolf Hitler. Silverman produced a promotional letter exclusively for Amazon.com, wherein she compares herself ironically to Ernest Hemingway and Fyodor Dostoevsky, classing herself as a serious writer.",
"score": "1.3923631"
},
{
"id": "2062895",
"title": "Katie Roiphe",
"text": " Katie Roiphe (born July 13, 1968) is an American author and journalist. She is best known as the author of the non-fiction examination The Morning After: Fear, Sex and Feminism (1994). She is also the author of Last Night in Paradise: Sex and Morals at the Century's End (1997), and the 2007 study of writers and marriage, Uncommon Arrangements. Her 2001 novel Still She Haunts Me is an imagining of the relationship between Charles Dodgson (known as Lewis Carroll) and Alice Liddell, the real-life model for Dodgson's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. She is also known for allegedly planning to out the creator of the Shitty Media Men list in an article for Harper's magazine.",
"score": "1.38987"
},
{
"id": "30496768",
"title": "Kristen Schaal",
"text": " Schaal wrote a book of humor, The Sexy Book of Sexy Sex, with her husband, former Daily Show writer Rich Blomquist. It was published in July 2010 by Chronicle Books. She originally intended for them to write the book under pseudonyms, \"because I don't want anyone to imagine me doing those things,\" but realized it would be harder to promote the book without using their real names.",
"score": "1.3890136"
},
{
"id": "6962471",
"title": "A Terribly Strange Bed",
"text": " \"A Terribly Strange Bed\" is a short story by Wilkie Collins, first published in 1852 in Household Words, a magazine edited by Charles Dickens. It was written near the beginning of his writing career, his first published book having appeared in 1848. Collins met Dickens in 1851, and this story was the first contribution by Collins to Dickens's magazine Household Words. After several more pieces for the magazine, he became a paid member of staff in 1856. In the story, an English visitor to a gambling-house in Paris stays overnight in the building, and is nearly killed by a specially constructed bed.",
"score": "1.3885391"
},
{
"id": "1150306",
"title": "The Middle East Bedside Book",
"text": " The Middle East Bedside Book is a collection of stories and information about the Middle East, edited by Anglo-Afghan author, Tahir Shah. The book was published in June 1991 by The Octagon Press.",
"score": "1.3864694"
},
{
"id": "10136153",
"title": "Good in Bed",
"text": " The book was optioned in 2002 by HBO for screen adaptation. In 2020, it was announced Mindy Kaling would produce, with Jessica Kumai Scott under their Kaling International banner, and star in. Howard Klein of 3 Arts Entertainment, and Jake Weiner and Chris Bender of Good Fear Content would also serve as producers. Elizabeth Sarnoff will write the script.",
"score": "1.3833569"
}
] | [
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Wendy Rawlings\n third book, Time for Bed, was published by Louisiana State University Press in 2019. In addition, Rawlings has published short fiction, essays, and criticism in a variety of journals, including AGNI, The Atlantic, Cincinnati Review, Crab Orchard Review, Fourth Genre, Massachusetts Review, The Normal School, Passages North, The Southern Review, Sonora Review, and Tin House. Born in Washington D.C. in 1967, Rawlings grew up in Bayville, New York. She received a B.A. from Trinity College (1988), an M.F.A. from Colorado State University (1996), and a Ph.D. from The University of Utah (2000). She has taught creative writing and literature at The University of Alabama since 2000, and lives in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.",
"Time for Bed\n Time for Bed is a 1996 novel by David Baddiel (ISBN: 978-0751519785).",
"Bed, Bed, Bed\n Bed, Bed, Bed is a book and EP package for children released by the musical group They Might Be Giants in 2003 (see 2003 in music) through Simon & Schuster. The book is composed of the lyrics of the four songs on the album, with illustrations by Marcel Dzama. The song \"Bed, Bed, Bed, Bed, Bed\" is a slower, quieter version of the song \"Bed, Bed, Bed\" from the album No!",
"Self-publishing\n for the catchy subtitle of \"A new way of getting children to sleep\". He released it on CreateSpace and it became a bestseller. ; Erotic romance author Meredith Wild sold 1.4 million digital and print copies of her books, and founded her own publishing company called Waterhouse Press; she founded the firm in part because she felt that her novels were \"not being taken seriously\" as an indie author. An advantage of having her own imprint is that it is easier to get books into chainstores and big-box retailers. The breakout hit Wool by Hugh Howey was self-published originally and garnered more than a million dollars in royalty monies, and has generated over 5000 Amazon reviews. ; James Altucher's ",
"While the Patient Slept (novel)\n The novel was first published in the United States by Doubleday, Doran & Company and in England by William Heinemann. It was most recently available in paperback through the University of Nebraska Press in a 1995 edition that features an introduction by Jay Fultz.",
"Good in Bed\n Good In Bed is the debut novel of Jennifer Weiner. It tells the story of an overweight Jewish female journalist, her love and work life and her emotional abuse issues with her father. The novel was a New York Times Best Seller and is currently being adapted into a film produced by and starring Mindy Kaling for HBO Max. Aspects of the plot were inspired by Weiner's own life.",
"Laurence Janifer\nThe Bed and I!, Intimate Books, 1962. ; Faithful for Eight Hours, Beacon Press, 1963. ",
"Bruce Bauman\n Bruce Bauman is an American writer. He is the author of the novels Broken Sleep (2015) and And The Word Was (2006). His work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Salon, BOMB, Bookforum, Dart International Magazine, and Black Clock. He has previously been awarded the City of Los Angeles Award in literature (2008-2009), a Durfee Foundation grant, and an UNESCO/Aschberg award.",
"Bed, Bed, Bed\nSimon & Schuster, 2003, Books & CD, ISBN: 0-7432-5024-9 ",
"Kathy Lette\n Imogen Edwards-Jones, Lette edited an anthology by prominent women writers of erotic short-stories, In Bed with... (2009), including contributions from Louise Doughty, Esther Freud, Ali Smith, Joan Smith, Rachel Johnson and Fay Weldon, each publishing under a pseudonym. In April 2009, she contributed to the fourth issue of the literary magazine Notes from the Underground with a piece honouring her close friend John Mortimer. In November 2009, she received an honorary doctorate from Southampton Solent University. She teamed with Radox to write a water-resistant book, which was released free online in September 2009, with an aim to encourage women to be selfish with their time.",
"Julie Markes\n Shhhhh! Everybody's Sleeping (ISBN: 0060537906) is a bedtime story that discusses fictional bedtimes for people of different professions (farmer, baker, etc.) It was published by HarperCollins in 2004. The book was selected by School Library Journal as a Best Book of 2005. It was also named one of Scholastic's \"Best Before-Bed Read-Alouds\".",
"Bed (Joel Corry, Raye and David Guetta song)\n \"Bed\" is a song by English DJ Joel Corry, English singer Raye and French DJ David Guetta. It was released as a single on 26 February 2021, through Perfect Havoc and Asylum Records UK. The song was written by Corry, Raye, Guetta, Giorgio Tuinfort, Jin Jin, Lewis Thompson and Neave Applebaum. The song was certified platinum on 23rd July 2021.",
"Clive Sinclair (author)\n Clive John Sinclair (19 February 1948 – 5 March 2018) was a British author who published several award-winning novels and collections of short stories, including The Lady with the Laptop and Bedbugs.",
"The Bedwetter\n The book was released on April 20, which is a \"day of celebration for marijuana users\" as well as the birthday of Adolf Hitler. Silverman produced a promotional letter exclusively for Amazon.com, wherein she compares herself ironically to Ernest Hemingway and Fyodor Dostoevsky, classing herself as a serious writer.",
"Katie Roiphe\n Katie Roiphe (born July 13, 1968) is an American author and journalist. She is best known as the author of the non-fiction examination The Morning After: Fear, Sex and Feminism (1994). She is also the author of Last Night in Paradise: Sex and Morals at the Century's End (1997), and the 2007 study of writers and marriage, Uncommon Arrangements. Her 2001 novel Still She Haunts Me is an imagining of the relationship between Charles Dodgson (known as Lewis Carroll) and Alice Liddell, the real-life model for Dodgson's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. She is also known for allegedly planning to out the creator of the Shitty Media Men list in an article for Harper's magazine.",
"Kristen Schaal\n Schaal wrote a book of humor, The Sexy Book of Sexy Sex, with her husband, former Daily Show writer Rich Blomquist. It was published in July 2010 by Chronicle Books. She originally intended for them to write the book under pseudonyms, \"because I don't want anyone to imagine me doing those things,\" but realized it would be harder to promote the book without using their real names.",
"A Terribly Strange Bed\n \"A Terribly Strange Bed\" is a short story by Wilkie Collins, first published in 1852 in Household Words, a magazine edited by Charles Dickens. It was written near the beginning of his writing career, his first published book having appeared in 1848. Collins met Dickens in 1851, and this story was the first contribution by Collins to Dickens's magazine Household Words. After several more pieces for the magazine, he became a paid member of staff in 1856. In the story, an English visitor to a gambling-house in Paris stays overnight in the building, and is nearly killed by a specially constructed bed.",
"The Middle East Bedside Book\n The Middle East Bedside Book is a collection of stories and information about the Middle East, edited by Anglo-Afghan author, Tahir Shah. The book was published in June 1991 by The Octagon Press.",
"Good in Bed\n The book was optioned in 2002 by HBO for screen adaptation. In 2020, it was announced Mindy Kaling would produce, with Jessica Kumai Scott under their Kaling International banner, and star in. Howard Klein of 3 Arts Entertainment, and Jake Weiner and Chris Bender of Good Fear Content would also serve as producers. Elizabeth Sarnoff will write the script."
] |
Who is the author of Watchers at the Strait Gate? | [
"Russell Kirk",
"Russell Amos Kirk"
] | author | Watchers at the Strait Gate | 6,147,968 | 84 | [
{
"id": "9961661",
"title": "Strait is the Gate",
"text": " Strait is the Gate (La Porte Étroite) is a 1909 French novel written by André Gide. It was translated into English by Dorothy Bussy. It probes the complexities and terrors of adolescence and growing up. Based on a Freudian interpretation, the story uses the influences of childhood experience and the misunderstandings that can arise between two people. Strait is the Gate taps the unassuaged memory of Gide's unsuccessful wooing of his cousin between 1888 and 1891. Much of the story is written as an epistolary novel between the Protagonist Jerome and his love Alissa. Much of the end of the novel is taken up by an exploration into Alissa's journal that details most of the events of the novel from her perspective.",
"score": "1.5198936"
},
{
"id": "29556258",
"title": "The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales",
"text": " The collection was first published in 1902 by W Blackwood & Sons, and included the stories No Man's Land, The Far Islands, The Watcher by the Threshold, The Outgoing of the Tide and Fountainblue. Four of the stories had been published in Blackwood's Magazine between January 1899 and August 1901, and one (\"The Outgoing of the Tide\") in The Atlantic Monthly in January 1902. When it was published by George H. Doran in the US in 1918, Fountainblue was omitted, and four additional stories were added, The Rime of True Thomas, Basilissa, Divus Johnston and The King of Ypres.",
"score": "1.4289649"
},
{
"id": "3674577",
"title": "Russell Kirk bibliography",
"text": " Invasion of the Church of the Holy Ghost” ; “An Encounter at Mortstone Pond” ; Afterword by Russell Kirk (“A Cautionary Note on the Ghostly Tale”): ; From the preface of the same title in his 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate ; This is not the essay of the same name reprinted in his 1962 story collection The Surly Sullen Bell These last three collections were prepared, by their respective editors and publishers, years after Kirk's death. The first two are uniform editions which, taken together, systematically collect all Kirk's stories. The third book gathers all but three of his stories in a single volume. ",
"score": "1.4248723"
},
{
"id": "28053118",
"title": "George Packer",
"text": " George Packer (born August 13, 1960) is a US journalist, novelist, and playwright. He is best known for his writings for The New Yorker and The Atlantic about U.S. foreign policy and for his book The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq. Packer also wrote The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America, covering the history of the US from 1978 to 2012. In November 2013, The Unwinding received the National Book Award for Nonfiction. His award winning biography, Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century, was released in May 2019. His latest book, Last Best Hope: America in Crisis and Renewal was released in June 2021.",
"score": "1.4016905"
},
{
"id": "13576501",
"title": "John Connolly (author)",
"text": "1) The Gates (2009) ; 2) The Infernals (2011), published as Hell's Bells in the UK ; 3) The Creeps (2013) ",
"score": "1.3911461"
},
{
"id": "261745",
"title": "Watcher in the Water",
"text": " In The Complete Tolkien Companion, J. E. A. Tyler suggests that the Watcher was a cold-drake: \"...these dragons rely on their strength and speed alone (the creature that attacked the Ring-bearer near the Lake of Moria may have been one of these).\" The essayist Allison Harl writes that the Watcher may be a kraken created and bred by Morgoth in Utumno, and that it represents a gatekeeper whose goal, in the context of the archetypal journey, is to keep the heroes from entering into new territory, psychologically or spiritually. This \"guardian theory\" has been echoed by writers such as Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers. The scholar of English literature Charles A. Huttar compares the combination of the Watcher in the Water and the \"clashing gate\" when the Fellowship pass through the Doors of Durin, only to have the Watcher smash ",
"score": "1.3701061"
},
{
"id": "3674571",
"title": "Russell Kirk bibliography",
"text": " the Ghostly Tale\"): ; Specially written for this collection ; This is not the essay of the same name reprinted as an afterword in Kirk’s 1962 story collection The Surly Sullen Bell ; Ten stories: ; “The Invasion of the Church of the Holy Ghost” ; “The Surly Sullen Bell” ; “The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” ; “Uncle Isaiah” ; “The Reflex-Man in Whinnymuir Close” ; “What Shadows We Pursue” ; “Lex Talionis” ; “Fate’s Purse” ; “An Encounter by Mortstone Pond” ; “Watchers at the Strait Gate” These three collections were published with Kirk's active involvement and include all his stories. (Six of the stories here appear in two of the books.) ",
"score": "1.350533"
},
{
"id": "9961664",
"title": "Strait is the Gate",
"text": " Alissa reached, by going the other way round the world, a damnation very similar to the Immoralist's – indeed, Strait is the Gate might be called The Moralist. Hers is a greater perversity than Michel's, who, after all, was only doing as liked. Alissa is doing what she does not like, and at each act of monstrous virtue her anguish increases, 'till at last it kills her. And yet, her vision of heavenly joy is so surpassingly beautiful as almost to justify its means. In the limited sense in which the Immoralist was right in sinning for earthly joy, Alissa was justified in sinning to achieve her view of heaven. And each pays the exact price – spiritual death for Michel, bodily death and worse for Alissa. 'Whom can I persuade that this book is the twin of The Immoralist,' Gide wrote in his journal, 'that the two subjects grew up together in my mind, the excess of the one finding a secret permission in the excess of the other, so that the two together form an equipoise?\"",
"score": "1.3500218"
},
{
"id": "32870361",
"title": "Arthur Stringer (writer)",
"text": " Stringer's first book of poetry, Watchers of Twilight and Other Poems, was published in 1894. In 1895 he worked for the Montreal Herald. At this time he was also publishing in Saturday Night and the Canadian Magazine. In 1898 he got a job with the American Press Association, moved to New York City, and began publishing in The Atlantic and Harper's. His first poem in Harper's, \"Remorse\", appeared in February 1899. His first novel, The Silver Poppy, came out in 1903. In the same year he bought a farm on the shore of Lake Erie. and married actress Jobyna Howland, known as the original Gibson girl. They divorced in 1914, and Stringer married his cousin, Margaret Arbuthnott. In 1921, the Stringers moved to Mountain Lakes, New Jersey, where Arthur Stringer ",
"score": "1.3418767"
},
{
"id": "8262794",
"title": "The Toll-Gate",
"text": " The Toll-Gate is a Regency novel by Georgette Heyer, which takes place in 1817. Unlike many of Heyer's historical novels which concentrate on a plucky heroine, this one follows the adventures of a male main character, an ex-captain in the British Army who has returned from the Peninsular War and finds life as a civilian rather dull. The setting for this detective/romance story is in and around a Toll-Gate in the Peak District, vastly different from the elegant backgrounds of London, Bath, Brighton, or some stately home, which characterize most of Heyer's Regency novels.",
"score": "1.3416235"
},
{
"id": "3674564",
"title": "Russell Kirk bibliography",
"text": " of All Lands, its only appearances editorially overseen by Kirk himself: ; The title change might have been motivated by the original's similarity to that of Kirk's 1961 novel Old House of Fear ; \"The Peculiar Demesne\" ; McCauley, Kirby (editor), Dark Forces: New Stories of Suspense and Supernatural Horror, New York, NY: Viking Press, 1980, ISBN: 0-670-25653-6 ; Called “The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” in reprints, including in Kirk's 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate, its only appearance editorially overseen by Kirk himself ; ”The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” ; Reprint name of 1980 story “The Peculiar Demesne”, including in Kirk's 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate, ",
"score": "1.3414874"
},
{
"id": "9961666",
"title": "Strait is the Gate",
"text": " mind, his impediment to virtue. She rejects him, time and time again, and yet this is the way in which she expresses love, because this is the only way he would enter the strait gate. What Alissa longs for, is not the strait gate itself, but the process of getting through the gate - it is the striving in “strive to enter in at the strait gate”. If either the strait gate of virtue or Jerome’s love were no more, Alissa’s desire would still stand. This is because it is not that we desire “something,” but that our desires and what we desire are ultimately a situation, a process, in which overall, something becomes the object of desire.",
"score": "1.340498"
},
{
"id": "9961662",
"title": "Strait is the Gate",
"text": " The story is set in a French north coast town. Jerome and Alissa, cousins, as 10- to 11-year-olds make an implicit commitment of undying affection for each other. However, in reaction to her mother's infidelities and from an intense religious impression, Alissa develops a rejection of human love. Nevertheless, she is happy to enjoy Jerome's intellectual discussions and keeps him hanging on to her affection. Jerome thereby fails to recognize the real love of Alissa's sister Juliette, who ends up making a fairly unsatisfactory marriage with M. Tessiere as a sacrifice to her sister Alissa's love for Jerome. Jerome believes he has a commitment of marriage from Alissa, but ",
"score": "1.3390615"
},
{
"id": "29556257",
"title": "The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales",
"text": " The book's epigraph is a quotation said to be an \"Extract from the writings of Donisarius of Padua, circa 1310.\" It contrasts active travellers who \"tarry in the outer courts, speeding the days joyfully with dance and song\" with those who remain near to home and who \"are found watching by the threshold\" night and day, \"ever anxious and ill at ease that they may see something of the Shadows which come and go.\"",
"score": "1.334689"
},
{
"id": "12223396",
"title": "The Gate of Time",
"text": " The Gate of Time is an alternate history novel by American writer Philip José Farmer. It was first published in paperback editions by Belmont Books in the United States in October 1966 and by Quartet in the United Kingdom in September 1974. Later it was revised and expanded as Two Hawks from Earth, in which form it was first published, also in paperback by Ace Books, in May 1979. This edition was reprinted by Berkley Books in July 1985. A trade paperback edition was published by MonkeyBrain Books with a new afterword by Christopher Paul Carey in May 2009. An authorized sequel, Man of War: A Two Hawks Adventure, was written by Heidi Ruby Miller and published in 2017.",
"score": "1.3334582"
},
{
"id": "4060101",
"title": "The Hour of the Gate",
"text": " The Hour of the Gate (1984) is a fantasy novel by American writer Alan Dean Foster. The book follows the continuing adventures of Jonathan Thomas Meriweather who is transported from our world into a land of talking animals and magic. It is the second book in the Spellsinger series.",
"score": "1.3313093"
},
{
"id": "29556263",
"title": "The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales",
"text": " Born on Scotland's North West coast, Colin Raden comes from an ancient family that had always been fascinated by mystical tales of land far out in the Western seas. Several of his forebears, indeed, had sailed West in search of such land, never to be heard of again. As a child, Colin spends hours on the beach staring out to sea and imagining what might be out there. His imaginings start to populate his dreams, but he always finds his view to the West blocked by a dense wall of mist. As he grows up he continues to have dreams, and gradually over the years the mist clears to disclose a far land, initially hardly visible but later becoming more distinct with signs of a sandy beach. He is in a small boat, never able to approach the shore. When Colin finds ",
"score": "1.3285737"
},
{
"id": "29556256",
"title": "The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales",
"text": " The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales is a collection of early novellas and stories, most with supernatural elements, by the Scottish author John Buchan. When first published in the UK in 1902 the collection included five stories, mainly set in the Scottish Borders. The collection was republished for the US market in 1918 under the title The Watcher by the Threshold, with four of the original stories and four new ones.",
"score": "1.3198743"
},
{
"id": "9961665",
"title": "Strait is the Gate",
"text": " The title refers to a phrase in the Gospel of Luke in the Bible: This verse appears at the end of the first chapter as the subject of a sermon on the Sunday after Alissa's mother runs away with another man. During this sermon Jerome resolves to become virtuous enough to deserve Alissa. However Alissa ultimately interprets the \"strait and narrow\" to preclude any earthly happiness that Jerome and she could share in marriage. The problem here being that the gate of virtue is too narrow for two people, too narrow for love, and too narrow for two people in love. Alissa so deliriously desires that even though she loves Jerome, this love between them has become, in ",
"score": "1.3188205"
},
{
"id": "29798418",
"title": "Watchers (novel)",
"text": " Watchers is a 1987 suspense novel by American author Dean Koontz. Along with Strangers, Lightning, and Midnight, Watchers is credited with establishing Koontz's status as a best-selling author.",
"score": "1.3170838"
}
] | [
"Strait is the Gate\n Strait is the Gate (La Porte Étroite) is a 1909 French novel written by André Gide. It was translated into English by Dorothy Bussy. It probes the complexities and terrors of adolescence and growing up. Based on a Freudian interpretation, the story uses the influences of childhood experience and the misunderstandings that can arise between two people. Strait is the Gate taps the unassuaged memory of Gide's unsuccessful wooing of his cousin between 1888 and 1891. Much of the story is written as an epistolary novel between the Protagonist Jerome and his love Alissa. Much of the end of the novel is taken up by an exploration into Alissa's journal that details most of the events of the novel from her perspective.",
"The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales\n The collection was first published in 1902 by W Blackwood & Sons, and included the stories No Man's Land, The Far Islands, The Watcher by the Threshold, The Outgoing of the Tide and Fountainblue. Four of the stories had been published in Blackwood's Magazine between January 1899 and August 1901, and one (\"The Outgoing of the Tide\") in The Atlantic Monthly in January 1902. When it was published by George H. Doran in the US in 1918, Fountainblue was omitted, and four additional stories were added, The Rime of True Thomas, Basilissa, Divus Johnston and The King of Ypres.",
"Russell Kirk bibliography\n Invasion of the Church of the Holy Ghost” ; “An Encounter at Mortstone Pond” ; Afterword by Russell Kirk (“A Cautionary Note on the Ghostly Tale”): ; From the preface of the same title in his 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate ; This is not the essay of the same name reprinted in his 1962 story collection The Surly Sullen Bell These last three collections were prepared, by their respective editors and publishers, years after Kirk's death. The first two are uniform editions which, taken together, systematically collect all Kirk's stories. The third book gathers all but three of his stories in a single volume. ",
"George Packer\n George Packer (born August 13, 1960) is a US journalist, novelist, and playwright. He is best known for his writings for The New Yorker and The Atlantic about U.S. foreign policy and for his book The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq. Packer also wrote The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America, covering the history of the US from 1978 to 2012. In November 2013, The Unwinding received the National Book Award for Nonfiction. His award winning biography, Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century, was released in May 2019. His latest book, Last Best Hope: America in Crisis and Renewal was released in June 2021.",
"John Connolly (author)\n1) The Gates (2009) ; 2) The Infernals (2011), published as Hell's Bells in the UK ; 3) The Creeps (2013) ",
"Watcher in the Water\n In The Complete Tolkien Companion, J. E. A. Tyler suggests that the Watcher was a cold-drake: \"...these dragons rely on their strength and speed alone (the creature that attacked the Ring-bearer near the Lake of Moria may have been one of these).\" The essayist Allison Harl writes that the Watcher may be a kraken created and bred by Morgoth in Utumno, and that it represents a gatekeeper whose goal, in the context of the archetypal journey, is to keep the heroes from entering into new territory, psychologically or spiritually. This \"guardian theory\" has been echoed by writers such as Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers. The scholar of English literature Charles A. Huttar compares the combination of the Watcher in the Water and the \"clashing gate\" when the Fellowship pass through the Doors of Durin, only to have the Watcher smash ",
"Russell Kirk bibliography\n the Ghostly Tale\"): ; Specially written for this collection ; This is not the essay of the same name reprinted as an afterword in Kirk’s 1962 story collection The Surly Sullen Bell ; Ten stories: ; “The Invasion of the Church of the Holy Ghost” ; “The Surly Sullen Bell” ; “The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” ; “Uncle Isaiah” ; “The Reflex-Man in Whinnymuir Close” ; “What Shadows We Pursue” ; “Lex Talionis” ; “Fate’s Purse” ; “An Encounter by Mortstone Pond” ; “Watchers at the Strait Gate” These three collections were published with Kirk's active involvement and include all his stories. (Six of the stories here appear in two of the books.) ",
"Strait is the Gate\n Alissa reached, by going the other way round the world, a damnation very similar to the Immoralist's – indeed, Strait is the Gate might be called The Moralist. Hers is a greater perversity than Michel's, who, after all, was only doing as liked. Alissa is doing what she does not like, and at each act of monstrous virtue her anguish increases, 'till at last it kills her. And yet, her vision of heavenly joy is so surpassingly beautiful as almost to justify its means. In the limited sense in which the Immoralist was right in sinning for earthly joy, Alissa was justified in sinning to achieve her view of heaven. And each pays the exact price – spiritual death for Michel, bodily death and worse for Alissa. 'Whom can I persuade that this book is the twin of The Immoralist,' Gide wrote in his journal, 'that the two subjects grew up together in my mind, the excess of the one finding a secret permission in the excess of the other, so that the two together form an equipoise?\"",
"Arthur Stringer (writer)\n Stringer's first book of poetry, Watchers of Twilight and Other Poems, was published in 1894. In 1895 he worked for the Montreal Herald. At this time he was also publishing in Saturday Night and the Canadian Magazine. In 1898 he got a job with the American Press Association, moved to New York City, and began publishing in The Atlantic and Harper's. His first poem in Harper's, \"Remorse\", appeared in February 1899. His first novel, The Silver Poppy, came out in 1903. In the same year he bought a farm on the shore of Lake Erie. and married actress Jobyna Howland, known as the original Gibson girl. They divorced in 1914, and Stringer married his cousin, Margaret Arbuthnott. In 1921, the Stringers moved to Mountain Lakes, New Jersey, where Arthur Stringer ",
"The Toll-Gate\n The Toll-Gate is a Regency novel by Georgette Heyer, which takes place in 1817. Unlike many of Heyer's historical novels which concentrate on a plucky heroine, this one follows the adventures of a male main character, an ex-captain in the British Army who has returned from the Peninsular War and finds life as a civilian rather dull. The setting for this detective/romance story is in and around a Toll-Gate in the Peak District, vastly different from the elegant backgrounds of London, Bath, Brighton, or some stately home, which characterize most of Heyer's Regency novels.",
"Russell Kirk bibliography\n of All Lands, its only appearances editorially overseen by Kirk himself: ; The title change might have been motivated by the original's similarity to that of Kirk's 1961 novel Old House of Fear ; \"The Peculiar Demesne\" ; McCauley, Kirby (editor), Dark Forces: New Stories of Suspense and Supernatural Horror, New York, NY: Viking Press, 1980, ISBN: 0-670-25653-6 ; Called “The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” in reprints, including in Kirk's 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate, its only appearance editorially overseen by Kirk himself ; ”The Peculiar Demesne of Archvicar Gerontion” ; Reprint name of 1980 story “The Peculiar Demesne”, including in Kirk's 1984 story collection Watchers at the Strait Gate, ",
"Strait is the Gate\n mind, his impediment to virtue. She rejects him, time and time again, and yet this is the way in which she expresses love, because this is the only way he would enter the strait gate. What Alissa longs for, is not the strait gate itself, but the process of getting through the gate - it is the striving in “strive to enter in at the strait gate”. If either the strait gate of virtue or Jerome’s love were no more, Alissa’s desire would still stand. This is because it is not that we desire “something,” but that our desires and what we desire are ultimately a situation, a process, in which overall, something becomes the object of desire.",
"Strait is the Gate\n The story is set in a French north coast town. Jerome and Alissa, cousins, as 10- to 11-year-olds make an implicit commitment of undying affection for each other. However, in reaction to her mother's infidelities and from an intense religious impression, Alissa develops a rejection of human love. Nevertheless, she is happy to enjoy Jerome's intellectual discussions and keeps him hanging on to her affection. Jerome thereby fails to recognize the real love of Alissa's sister Juliette, who ends up making a fairly unsatisfactory marriage with M. Tessiere as a sacrifice to her sister Alissa's love for Jerome. Jerome believes he has a commitment of marriage from Alissa, but ",
"The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales\n The book's epigraph is a quotation said to be an \"Extract from the writings of Donisarius of Padua, circa 1310.\" It contrasts active travellers who \"tarry in the outer courts, speeding the days joyfully with dance and song\" with those who remain near to home and who \"are found watching by the threshold\" night and day, \"ever anxious and ill at ease that they may see something of the Shadows which come and go.\"",
"The Gate of Time\n The Gate of Time is an alternate history novel by American writer Philip José Farmer. It was first published in paperback editions by Belmont Books in the United States in October 1966 and by Quartet in the United Kingdom in September 1974. Later it was revised and expanded as Two Hawks from Earth, in which form it was first published, also in paperback by Ace Books, in May 1979. This edition was reprinted by Berkley Books in July 1985. A trade paperback edition was published by MonkeyBrain Books with a new afterword by Christopher Paul Carey in May 2009. An authorized sequel, Man of War: A Two Hawks Adventure, was written by Heidi Ruby Miller and published in 2017.",
"The Hour of the Gate\n The Hour of the Gate (1984) is a fantasy novel by American writer Alan Dean Foster. The book follows the continuing adventures of Jonathan Thomas Meriweather who is transported from our world into a land of talking animals and magic. It is the second book in the Spellsinger series.",
"The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales\n Born on Scotland's North West coast, Colin Raden comes from an ancient family that had always been fascinated by mystical tales of land far out in the Western seas. Several of his forebears, indeed, had sailed West in search of such land, never to be heard of again. As a child, Colin spends hours on the beach staring out to sea and imagining what might be out there. His imaginings start to populate his dreams, but he always finds his view to the West blocked by a dense wall of mist. As he grows up he continues to have dreams, and gradually over the years the mist clears to disclose a far land, initially hardly visible but later becoming more distinct with signs of a sandy beach. He is in a small boat, never able to approach the shore. When Colin finds ",
"The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales\n The Watcher by the Threshold, and other tales is a collection of early novellas and stories, most with supernatural elements, by the Scottish author John Buchan. When first published in the UK in 1902 the collection included five stories, mainly set in the Scottish Borders. The collection was republished for the US market in 1918 under the title The Watcher by the Threshold, with four of the original stories and four new ones.",
"Strait is the Gate\n The title refers to a phrase in the Gospel of Luke in the Bible: This verse appears at the end of the first chapter as the subject of a sermon on the Sunday after Alissa's mother runs away with another man. During this sermon Jerome resolves to become virtuous enough to deserve Alissa. However Alissa ultimately interprets the \"strait and narrow\" to preclude any earthly happiness that Jerome and she could share in marriage. The problem here being that the gate of virtue is too narrow for two people, too narrow for love, and too narrow for two people in love. Alissa so deliriously desires that even though she loves Jerome, this love between them has become, in ",
"Watchers (novel)\n Watchers is a 1987 suspense novel by American author Dean Koontz. Along with Strangers, Lightning, and Midnight, Watchers is credited with establishing Koontz's status as a best-selling author."
] |
Who is the author of Bones? | [
"Jonathan Kellerman",
"Jonathan Seth Kellerman"
] | author | Bones (Kellerman novel) | 3,545,210 | 50 | [
{
"id": "14360781",
"title": "A Thousand Bones",
"text": " A Thousand Bones is a book written by P. J. Parrish and published by Pocket Books (owned by Simon & Schuster ) on 1 January 2007, which later went on to win the Anthony Award for Best Paperback Original in 2008.",
"score": "1.5550804"
},
{
"id": "12180459",
"title": "Them Bones (novel)",
"text": " Them Bones (1984) is the first solo novel by science fiction writer Howard Waldrop, noted for his short fiction. It was nominated for the Philip K. Dick Award in 1984, but lost out to William Gibson's Neuromancer; both novels were part of the third Ace Science Fiction Specials series edited by Terry Carr.",
"score": "1.525413"
},
{
"id": "15585379",
"title": "The Farming of Bones",
"text": " Farming of Bones is a work of historical fiction by Edwidge Danticat, published in 1998. It tells the story of an orphaned young Haitian woman living in the Dominican Republic who gets caught up in the carnage of the Parsley massacre during the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo.",
"score": "1.5046303"
},
{
"id": "16105752",
"title": "The Maze of Bones",
"text": " The Maze of Bones is the first novel of The 39 Clues series, written by Rick Riordan and published September 9, 2008 by Scholastic. It stars Amy and Dan Cahill, two orphans who discover, upon their grandmother Grace's death, that they are part of the powerful Cahill family, whose members constantly fight each other for Clues, which are ingredients to a mysterious serum. The novel has received generally positive reviews.",
"score": "1.485333"
},
{
"id": "6624433",
"title": "The Bone World Trilogy",
"text": " The Bone World Trilogy is a trilogy for young adults by Irish author Peadar Ó Guilín. The series has elements of science fiction and fantasy. The first book in the trilogy, The Inferior, was published by David Fickling Books in 2007 (2008 in the U.S.A.), and the sequel, The Deserter, was published in September 2011.",
"score": "1.47878"
},
{
"id": "30520523",
"title": "Grey Crawford",
"text": "Finding Bones, Published by Kehrer Verlag, Heidelberg 2017, Introduction by Timothy Persons, Essay by Lyle Rexer. ; El Mirage, Published by Hatje Cantz, Berlin 2018, Introduction by Timothy Persons, Essay by Lyle Rexer. ",
"score": "1.4773812"
},
{
"id": "3417459",
"title": "Bones (TV series)",
"text": " Tamara Taylor, John Francis Daley, and John Boyd. The series is very loosely based on the life and novels of Kathy Reichs, a forensic anthropologist, who also produced the show. Its title character, Temperance Brennan, is named after the protagonist of Reichs' crime novel series. In the Bones universe, Dr. Brennan writes successful mystery novels featuring a fictional forensic anthropologist named Kathy Reichs. Bones is a joint production by Josephson Entertainment and Far Field Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television and syndicated by 20th Television. The series is the longest-running one-hour drama series produced by 20th Century Fox Television.",
"score": "1.4768307"
},
{
"id": "1727494",
"title": "Written in Bone",
"text": " Written in Bone is a novel written by the British crime fiction writer Simon Beckett, first published in 2007. It is the second novel to feature Dr. David Hunter. Set in the Outer Hebrides, this crime novel features forensic anthropologist Dr. David Hunter. In this volume, he is called in to examine a badly burned body found in a deserted house on a small island while contending with both personal and professional obstacles. It received positive reviews as being better than Beckett's first novel, with satisfying plot twists and well-implemented scientific details.",
"score": "1.4698062"
},
{
"id": "3417517",
"title": "Bones (TV series)",
"text": "Buried Deep (also released as \"Bones Buried Deep\"; ISBN: 978-1-4165-2461-8), written by Max Allan Collins, was published by Pocket Star February 28, 2006. The book is based on the characters in the television series rather than the characters created by Kathy Reichs, who had inspired the concept of Bones. Its plot focuses on Dr. Temperance Brennan and Special Agent Seeley Booth's investigation into the skeletal remains left on the steps of a federal building and its connection with a Chicago mob family. Angela, Hodgins and Zack only appear on the end of telephone conversations with Brennan. ; Bones: The Official Companion (ISBN: 978-1-84576-539-2) is written by Paul Ruditis ",
"score": "1.468385"
},
{
"id": "2716004",
"title": "The Bone Clocks",
"text": " The Bone Clocks is a novel by British writer David Mitchell. It was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize 2014, and called one of the best novels of 2014 by Stephen King. The novel won the 2015 World Fantasy Award. The novel is divided into six sections with five first-person point-of-view narrators. They are loosely connected by the character of Holly Sykes, a young woman from Gravesend who is gifted with an \"invisible eye\" and semi-psychic abilities, and a war between two immortal factions, the Anchorites, who derive their immortality from murdering others, and the Horologists, who are naturally able to reincarnate. The title refers to a derogatory term the immortal characters use for normal humans, who are doomed to mortality because of their aging bodies.",
"score": "1.46177"
},
{
"id": "9032425",
"title": "Fever of the Bone",
"text": " Fever of the Bone is a novel written by noted Scottish crime author Val McDermid. It was published by Little, Brown in Great Britain (2009) and HarperCollins for the United States and Canada (2010), and is the sixth novel in the series featuring psychologist Dr. Tony Hill and Detective Chief Inspector Carol Jordan. Several of the books in this series have been adapted into the television series Wire in the Blood, starring Robson Green as Tony Hill and Hermione Norris as Carol Jordan. As with other novels in the series, the title for this novel is taken from a poem by T. S. Eliot; in this case the poem is \"Whispers of Immortality\" (\"No contact possible to flesh Allayed the fever of the bone\").",
"score": "1.4564576"
},
{
"id": "27922969",
"title": "Ian Bone (author)",
"text": "For the British anarchist, see Ian Bone. Ian Bone (born 1956) is an Australian writer, author and novelist.",
"score": "1.4531513"
},
{
"id": "2621837",
"title": "Dry Bones in the Valley",
"text": " Dry Bones in the Valley (ISBN: 978-0-393-35078-4) is a book written by Tom Bouman and was originally published by W. W. Norton & Company on 7 July 2014 which later went on to win the Edgar Award for Best First Novel in 2015.",
"score": "1.4494781"
},
{
"id": "3417511",
"title": "Bones (TV series)",
"text": " In October 2010, it was revealed that Fox was developing a potential spin-off series that would be built around a new recurring character that would be introduced in the sixth season. The potential spin-off series would also be created by Bones creator/executive producer Hart Hanson, and be based on The Locator series of two books written by Richard Greener. The character of Walter is described as an eccentric but amusing recluse in high demand for his ability to find anything. He is skeptical of everything—he suffered brain damage while overseas, which explains his constant paranoia and his being notorious for asking offensive, seemingly irrelevant questions to get to the truth. Production on the episode was scheduled to begin in ",
"score": "1.4432994"
},
{
"id": "29958835",
"title": "The Englishman of the Bones (novel)",
"text": " A young English expert on fossils meets and has a relationship with a gaucho woman while he is investigating the remains of indigenous people in Argentina. When he leaves, she is overcome with despair and kills herself.",
"score": "1.4413706"
},
{
"id": "13326296",
"title": "The Lovely Bones",
"text": " The Lovely Bones is a 2002 novel by American writer Alice Sebold. It is the story of a teenage girl who, after being raped and murdered, watches from her personal Heaven as her family and friends struggle to move on with their lives while she comes to terms with her own death. The novel received critical praise and became an instant bestseller. A film adaptation, directed by Peter Jackson, who personally purchased the rights, was released in 2009. The novel was also later adapted as a play of the same name, which premiered in England in 2018.",
"score": "1.4401064"
},
{
"id": "29337463",
"title": "Connie May Fowler",
"text": " was published by Grand Central/Hachette Book Group in April 2010. Her short story \"Do Not Enter the Memory\" was published in the fall/2010 edition of Oxford American. An excerpt from A Million Fragile Bones, was published in the January 2017 issue of The Sun Magazine. She is working on a dystopian novel titled STONE BY STONE. She is a core faculty member of the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA in Writing program and directs their VCFA Novel Retreat. She, along with her husband Bill Hinson, are founders and directors of The Yucatan Writing Conference (formerly The St. Augustine Writers Conference).",
"score": "1.4349939"
},
{
"id": "11502123",
"title": "Michael Byrnes (writer)",
"text": " Michael J. Byrnes is an American author of archeological thrillers. He attended Montclair State University, and received a graduate degree in business administration from Rutgers University. His first novel was The Sacred Bones (2007), held in 797 libraries and translated into ten languages. Since then he has written two more novels.",
"score": "1.4298924"
},
{
"id": "2716017",
"title": "The Bone Clocks",
"text": " From 2015 to 2020, author Crispin Hershey, once a literary wunderkind, sees his fortunes decline. His latest novel has not sold well thanks to a brutally unfavourable review by Richard Cheeseman, now an established critic; he is estranged from his Canadian wife and two young daughters; and at a book fair, he is upstaged by new author Holly Sykes who has written an immensely popular book about her psychic visions called The Radio People. Crispin also encounters a young Asian-American woman who introduces herself as Soleil Moore and hands him a book of her poetry which he promptly trashes. At a literary festival in Colombia, Crispin decides to get his revenge on Cheeseman ",
"score": "1.423497"
},
{
"id": "13146430",
"title": "The Bone People",
"text": " The Bone People (styled by the writer and in some editions as the bone people ) is a Booker Prize-winning 1984 novel by New Zealand writer Keri Hulme.",
"score": "1.4228181"
}
] | [
"A Thousand Bones\n A Thousand Bones is a book written by P. J. Parrish and published by Pocket Books (owned by Simon & Schuster ) on 1 January 2007, which later went on to win the Anthony Award for Best Paperback Original in 2008.",
"Them Bones (novel)\n Them Bones (1984) is the first solo novel by science fiction writer Howard Waldrop, noted for his short fiction. It was nominated for the Philip K. Dick Award in 1984, but lost out to William Gibson's Neuromancer; both novels were part of the third Ace Science Fiction Specials series edited by Terry Carr.",
"The Farming of Bones\n Farming of Bones is a work of historical fiction by Edwidge Danticat, published in 1998. It tells the story of an orphaned young Haitian woman living in the Dominican Republic who gets caught up in the carnage of the Parsley massacre during the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo.",
"The Maze of Bones\n The Maze of Bones is the first novel of The 39 Clues series, written by Rick Riordan and published September 9, 2008 by Scholastic. It stars Amy and Dan Cahill, two orphans who discover, upon their grandmother Grace's death, that they are part of the powerful Cahill family, whose members constantly fight each other for Clues, which are ingredients to a mysterious serum. The novel has received generally positive reviews.",
"The Bone World Trilogy\n The Bone World Trilogy is a trilogy for young adults by Irish author Peadar Ó Guilín. The series has elements of science fiction and fantasy. The first book in the trilogy, The Inferior, was published by David Fickling Books in 2007 (2008 in the U.S.A.), and the sequel, The Deserter, was published in September 2011.",
"Grey Crawford\nFinding Bones, Published by Kehrer Verlag, Heidelberg 2017, Introduction by Timothy Persons, Essay by Lyle Rexer. ; El Mirage, Published by Hatje Cantz, Berlin 2018, Introduction by Timothy Persons, Essay by Lyle Rexer. ",
"Bones (TV series)\n Tamara Taylor, John Francis Daley, and John Boyd. The series is very loosely based on the life and novels of Kathy Reichs, a forensic anthropologist, who also produced the show. Its title character, Temperance Brennan, is named after the protagonist of Reichs' crime novel series. In the Bones universe, Dr. Brennan writes successful mystery novels featuring a fictional forensic anthropologist named Kathy Reichs. Bones is a joint production by Josephson Entertainment and Far Field Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television and syndicated by 20th Television. The series is the longest-running one-hour drama series produced by 20th Century Fox Television.",
"Written in Bone\n Written in Bone is a novel written by the British crime fiction writer Simon Beckett, first published in 2007. It is the second novel to feature Dr. David Hunter. Set in the Outer Hebrides, this crime novel features forensic anthropologist Dr. David Hunter. In this volume, he is called in to examine a badly burned body found in a deserted house on a small island while contending with both personal and professional obstacles. It received positive reviews as being better than Beckett's first novel, with satisfying plot twists and well-implemented scientific details.",
"Bones (TV series)\nBuried Deep (also released as \"Bones Buried Deep\"; ISBN: 978-1-4165-2461-8), written by Max Allan Collins, was published by Pocket Star February 28, 2006. The book is based on the characters in the television series rather than the characters created by Kathy Reichs, who had inspired the concept of Bones. Its plot focuses on Dr. Temperance Brennan and Special Agent Seeley Booth's investigation into the skeletal remains left on the steps of a federal building and its connection with a Chicago mob family. Angela, Hodgins and Zack only appear on the end of telephone conversations with Brennan. ; Bones: The Official Companion (ISBN: 978-1-84576-539-2) is written by Paul Ruditis ",
"The Bone Clocks\n The Bone Clocks is a novel by British writer David Mitchell. It was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize 2014, and called one of the best novels of 2014 by Stephen King. The novel won the 2015 World Fantasy Award. The novel is divided into six sections with five first-person point-of-view narrators. They are loosely connected by the character of Holly Sykes, a young woman from Gravesend who is gifted with an \"invisible eye\" and semi-psychic abilities, and a war between two immortal factions, the Anchorites, who derive their immortality from murdering others, and the Horologists, who are naturally able to reincarnate. The title refers to a derogatory term the immortal characters use for normal humans, who are doomed to mortality because of their aging bodies.",
"Fever of the Bone\n Fever of the Bone is a novel written by noted Scottish crime author Val McDermid. It was published by Little, Brown in Great Britain (2009) and HarperCollins for the United States and Canada (2010), and is the sixth novel in the series featuring psychologist Dr. Tony Hill and Detective Chief Inspector Carol Jordan. Several of the books in this series have been adapted into the television series Wire in the Blood, starring Robson Green as Tony Hill and Hermione Norris as Carol Jordan. As with other novels in the series, the title for this novel is taken from a poem by T. S. Eliot; in this case the poem is \"Whispers of Immortality\" (\"No contact possible to flesh Allayed the fever of the bone\").",
"Ian Bone (author)\nFor the British anarchist, see Ian Bone. Ian Bone (born 1956) is an Australian writer, author and novelist.",
"Dry Bones in the Valley\n Dry Bones in the Valley (ISBN: 978-0-393-35078-4) is a book written by Tom Bouman and was originally published by W. W. Norton & Company on 7 July 2014 which later went on to win the Edgar Award for Best First Novel in 2015.",
"Bones (TV series)\n In October 2010, it was revealed that Fox was developing a potential spin-off series that would be built around a new recurring character that would be introduced in the sixth season. The potential spin-off series would also be created by Bones creator/executive producer Hart Hanson, and be based on The Locator series of two books written by Richard Greener. The character of Walter is described as an eccentric but amusing recluse in high demand for his ability to find anything. He is skeptical of everything—he suffered brain damage while overseas, which explains his constant paranoia and his being notorious for asking offensive, seemingly irrelevant questions to get to the truth. Production on the episode was scheduled to begin in ",
"The Englishman of the Bones (novel)\n A young English expert on fossils meets and has a relationship with a gaucho woman while he is investigating the remains of indigenous people in Argentina. When he leaves, she is overcome with despair and kills herself.",
"The Lovely Bones\n The Lovely Bones is a 2002 novel by American writer Alice Sebold. It is the story of a teenage girl who, after being raped and murdered, watches from her personal Heaven as her family and friends struggle to move on with their lives while she comes to terms with her own death. The novel received critical praise and became an instant bestseller. A film adaptation, directed by Peter Jackson, who personally purchased the rights, was released in 2009. The novel was also later adapted as a play of the same name, which premiered in England in 2018.",
"Connie May Fowler\n was published by Grand Central/Hachette Book Group in April 2010. Her short story \"Do Not Enter the Memory\" was published in the fall/2010 edition of Oxford American. An excerpt from A Million Fragile Bones, was published in the January 2017 issue of The Sun Magazine. She is working on a dystopian novel titled STONE BY STONE. She is a core faculty member of the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA in Writing program and directs their VCFA Novel Retreat. She, along with her husband Bill Hinson, are founders and directors of The Yucatan Writing Conference (formerly The St. Augustine Writers Conference).",
"Michael Byrnes (writer)\n Michael J. Byrnes is an American author of archeological thrillers. He attended Montclair State University, and received a graduate degree in business administration from Rutgers University. His first novel was The Sacred Bones (2007), held in 797 libraries and translated into ten languages. Since then he has written two more novels.",
"The Bone Clocks\n From 2015 to 2020, author Crispin Hershey, once a literary wunderkind, sees his fortunes decline. His latest novel has not sold well thanks to a brutally unfavourable review by Richard Cheeseman, now an established critic; he is estranged from his Canadian wife and two young daughters; and at a book fair, he is upstaged by new author Holly Sykes who has written an immensely popular book about her psychic visions called The Radio People. Crispin also encounters a young Asian-American woman who introduces herself as Soleil Moore and hands him a book of her poetry which he promptly trashes. At a literary festival in Colombia, Crispin decides to get his revenge on Cheeseman ",
"The Bone People\n The Bone People (styled by the writer and in some editions as the bone people ) is a Booker Prize-winning 1984 novel by New Zealand writer Keri Hulme."
] |
Who is the author of Only Human? | [
"Eileen Wilks"
] | author | Only Human (short story) | 5,343,876 | 75 | [
{
"id": "31835194",
"title": "Only Human (novel)",
"text": " Only Human is a BBC Books original novel written by Gareth Roberts and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on 8 September 2005, alongside The Deviant Strain and The Stealers of Dreams. It features the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler and Captain Jack.",
"score": "1.7318809"
},
{
"id": "15734994",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " Only Human by Eileen Wilks is a short story in the Lover Beware anthology. It is also the first story in the World of the Lupi series. It came out in July 2003.",
"score": "1.713872"
},
{
"id": "3762478",
"title": "Human?",
"text": " Human? is an anthology of science fiction and fantasy stories edited by Judith Merril, published as a paperback original by Lion Books in 1954. No further editions were issued.",
"score": "1.5628743"
},
{
"id": "13042909",
"title": "Ted Poley",
"text": "Only Human (2008) ",
"score": "1.4976113"
},
{
"id": "15734997",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " This romantic suspense novel is the first novel Eileen Wilks wrote set in the World of the Lupi. After her editor (and the fans) enjoyed it so much Eileen asked if she could expand this short story into a full-blown series. Tempting Danger expands on this story and ends up taking the characters in different directions than the original short story.",
"score": "1.4892281"
},
{
"id": "2802717",
"title": "Being Human novels",
"text": " The Being Human novels are a series of three fantasy novels written by Simon Guerrier, Mark Michalowski and James Goss. The novels are based on the British television series Being Human, created by Toby Whithouse.",
"score": "1.4834585"
},
{
"id": "15734995",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " Eileen's story in the Lover Beware anthology is entitled Only Human. In it Lily is a Chinese-American detective working with the city of San Diego on a murder that appears to be the work of a werewolf. But, if she wants to find out who the killer is, she'll have to get inside the clans. She enlists the help of a were named Rule, though she detests his species. Will her prejudices hold up under the heat of passion?",
"score": "1.4788677"
},
{
"id": "7203365",
"title": "North East Humanists",
"text": "Modern Humanism by Alfred Hoburn and Neil Jenkins. First published in 1989 by Dene Books and updated by NEH. ",
"score": "1.477829"
},
{
"id": "3753171",
"title": "Gareth Roberts (writer)",
"text": " and in 2005 writing another Doctor Who novel, Only Human, based on the characters from the new series launched that year, for BBC Books' New Series Adventures range. A further novel, I am a Dalek, was released in 2006 and featured the Tenth Doctor. I am a Dalek is part of a Government \"Quick Reads initiative\". He also co-wrote The New Gods with Rebecca Levene, the first Tomorrow People audio drama for Big Finish. Roberts appeared as a contributor to the documentary Serial Thrillers, exploring the popular Philip Hinchcliffe era of Doctor Who between 1975 and 1977, which featured as an extra on the 2004 DVD release of the serial Pyramids of ",
"score": "1.460664"
},
{
"id": "3762479",
"title": "Human?",
"text": "\"Introduction\", Fredric Brown ; \"I: As Others See Us…\", Judith Merril ; \"The Big Contest\", John D. MacDonald (Worlds Beyond 1950) ; \"The Boy Next Door\", Chad Oliver (F&SF 1951) ; \"Take a Seat\", Eric Frank Russell (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"An Egg a Month from All Over\", Idris Seabright (F&SF 1952) ; \"Riya’s Foundling\", Algis Budrys (Science Fiction Stories #1 1953) ; \"II: Earthlings All\", Judith Merril ; \"ghosts\", Don Marquis (Archy and Mehitabel, 1927) ; \"Smoke Ghost\", Fritz Leiber (Unknown 1941) ; \"Who Shall I Say Is Calling?\", August Derleth (F&SF 1952) ; \"The Gnarly Man\", L. Sprague de Camp (Unknown 1939) ; \"The Temptation of Harringay\", H. G. Wells (The St. James’s Gazette 1895) ; \"The Ultimate Egoist\", Theodore Sturgeon (Unknown 1941) ; \"Rope Enough\", John Collier (The New Yorker 1939) ; \"III: Tomorrow Will Be Better?\", Judith Merril ; \"Liar!\", Isaac Asimov (Astounding 1941) ; \"Who Knows His Brother\", Graham Doar (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"Crucifixus Etiam\", Walter M. Miller, Jr. (Astounding 1953) ",
"score": "1.4525155"
},
{
"id": "14492515",
"title": "Human Enhancement",
"text": " Human Enhancement (2009) is a non-fiction book edited by philosopher Nick Bostrom and philosopher and bioethicist Julian Savulescu. Savulescu and Bostrom write about the ethical implications of human enhancement and to what extent it is worth striving towards.",
"score": "1.4495858"
},
{
"id": "26141287",
"title": "Only Human (Cheryl song)",
"text": " \"Only Human\" is a song by English recording artist Cheryl from her fourth studio album of the same name (2014). It was released on 22 March 2015 through Polydor Records as the third single from the album. \"Only Human\" is an electronic ballad, written by Matt Schwartz, Jo Perry and Cass Lowe, whilst produced by Schwartz. Lyrically, it finds Cheryl singing about the inspiration to forgive yourself for being human and live your best life in spite of everything. \"Only Human\" received positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its production and called it her best ballad to date. \"Only Human\" was remixed for ",
"score": "1.4443953"
},
{
"id": "6759717",
"title": "Team Human",
"text": " Team Human is a young adult novel co-written by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan. It was published in 2012 by Harper Teen, a division of Harper Collins. The book came out of the authors' shared love of vampire stories, and is both parody and celebration of the genre. The book is dedicated to a long list of authors who have written in the genre, including Stephen King, Stephenie Meyer, Anne Rice, Bram Stoker, and Larbalestier's husband Scott Westerfeld.",
"score": "1.4434507"
},
{
"id": "91871",
"title": "Human Is",
"text": " \"Human Is\" is a science fiction short story by American writer Philip K. Dick. It was first published in Startling Stories, Winter 1955. The plot centers on the crisis facing a woman whose cold and emotionally abusive husband returns from a survey mission to the dying planet Rexor IV, changed for the better—his psyche was replaced by a Rexorian, glad to have escaped the confines of its dying planet. The story was adapted by Jessica Mecklenburg for an episode of the 2017 TV series, Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams.",
"score": "1.4431999"
},
{
"id": "30005845",
"title": "The World Without Us",
"text": " The book was first published on July 10, 2007, as a hardback in the United States by St. Martin's Thomas Dunne Books, in United Kingdom by Virgin Books and in Canada by HarperCollins. The paperback was released in July 2008. It has been translated and published in Denmark by Borgen as Verden uden os, France by Groupe Flammarion as Homo disparitus, in Germany by Piper as Die Welt ohne uns, in Portugal by Estrela Polar as O Mundo Sem Nós, in Italy by Einaudi as Il mondo senza di noi, in Poland by CKA as Świat bez nas, and in Japan by Hayakawa Publishing as Jinrui ga kieta sekai (人類が消えた世界; \"A World where the Human Race has Disappeared\"). Pete Garceau designed the cover art for the American release, which one critic said was \"a ",
"score": "1.4376745"
},
{
"id": "31835195",
"title": "Only Human (novel)",
"text": " The presence of a Neanderthal on present-day Earth alerts the Doctor, Rose and Jack to the fact that someone is meddling with time. In order to learn the truth, they must travel back 28,000 years, where they meet humans of the past and future — and something far, far worse.",
"score": "1.4331416"
},
{
"id": "430729",
"title": "Only Human (Example song)",
"text": " \"Only Human\" is a song by British singer Example. It was released through Epic Records as an instant download when pre-ordering his fifth studio album Live Life Living. The song is written and produced by Example, Sheldrake and Alf Bamford.",
"score": "1.4282997"
},
{
"id": "10030298",
"title": "Christopher Potter (author)",
"text": " His first book, You Are Here, was published in 2009 by Hutchinson (Random House) in the UK and HarperCollins in America. It was translated into 15 languages. \"One of the best popular science books I have ever read,\" wrote Stuart Jeffries in the Guardian. The Sunday Times described it as \"One of the most entertaining and thoughtful pop-science books to be published for years.\" Potter's second book, How to Make a Human Being, was published in 2014 by Fourth Estate. \"A sort of commonplace book full of paradox and conflicting ideas, shocking facts and redemptive anecdotes, turbulent with two or three millennia of human thought,\" wrote The Guardian. His third book, The Earth Gazers, was published in 2018 by Head of Zeus in the UK and Pegasus in America. The Times described it as \"A fresh and elegantly wrought account of mankind’s journey from firing lumps of jerry-rigged metal from cabbage fields to crunching around in the dust of another world.\"",
"score": "1.4215393"
},
{
"id": "32186581",
"title": "Matt Ridley",
"text": " is often impeded by politicians. Ridley makes his case by examining historical examples, rather than appealing solely to abstract principles. Written jointly with Alina Chan, it was published in November 2021. Ridley is best known as the author of a number of popular science books, listed below. The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature, 1993 The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation, 1996 Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters, 1999 Nature via Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human, 2003 (also later released under the title The Agile Gene: How ",
"score": "1.4176595"
},
{
"id": "1486295",
"title": "The One and Only Ivan",
"text": " The One and Only Ivan is a 2012 novel written by Katherine Applegate and illustrated by Patricia Castelao. It is about a silverback gorilla named Ivan who lived in a cage at a mall, and is written from Ivan's point of view. In 2013 it was named the winner of the Newbery Medal. It has won several other awards and is currently nominated to several reading lists. It was followed in 2020 by The One and Only Bob, presented from the point of view of Ivan's best friend, the dog Bob.",
"score": "1.4141617"
}
] | [
"Only Human (novel)\n Only Human is a BBC Books original novel written by Gareth Roberts and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on 8 September 2005, alongside The Deviant Strain and The Stealers of Dreams. It features the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler and Captain Jack.",
"Only Human (short story)\n Only Human by Eileen Wilks is a short story in the Lover Beware anthology. It is also the first story in the World of the Lupi series. It came out in July 2003.",
"Human?\n Human? is an anthology of science fiction and fantasy stories edited by Judith Merril, published as a paperback original by Lion Books in 1954. No further editions were issued.",
"Ted Poley\nOnly Human (2008) ",
"Only Human (short story)\n This romantic suspense novel is the first novel Eileen Wilks wrote set in the World of the Lupi. After her editor (and the fans) enjoyed it so much Eileen asked if she could expand this short story into a full-blown series. Tempting Danger expands on this story and ends up taking the characters in different directions than the original short story.",
"Being Human novels\n The Being Human novels are a series of three fantasy novels written by Simon Guerrier, Mark Michalowski and James Goss. The novels are based on the British television series Being Human, created by Toby Whithouse.",
"Only Human (short story)\n Eileen's story in the Lover Beware anthology is entitled Only Human. In it Lily is a Chinese-American detective working with the city of San Diego on a murder that appears to be the work of a werewolf. But, if she wants to find out who the killer is, she'll have to get inside the clans. She enlists the help of a were named Rule, though she detests his species. Will her prejudices hold up under the heat of passion?",
"North East Humanists\nModern Humanism by Alfred Hoburn and Neil Jenkins. First published in 1989 by Dene Books and updated by NEH. ",
"Gareth Roberts (writer)\n and in 2005 writing another Doctor Who novel, Only Human, based on the characters from the new series launched that year, for BBC Books' New Series Adventures range. A further novel, I am a Dalek, was released in 2006 and featured the Tenth Doctor. I am a Dalek is part of a Government \"Quick Reads initiative\". He also co-wrote The New Gods with Rebecca Levene, the first Tomorrow People audio drama for Big Finish. Roberts appeared as a contributor to the documentary Serial Thrillers, exploring the popular Philip Hinchcliffe era of Doctor Who between 1975 and 1977, which featured as an extra on the 2004 DVD release of the serial Pyramids of ",
"Human?\n\"Introduction\", Fredric Brown ; \"I: As Others See Us…\", Judith Merril ; \"The Big Contest\", John D. MacDonald (Worlds Beyond 1950) ; \"The Boy Next Door\", Chad Oliver (F&SF 1951) ; \"Take a Seat\", Eric Frank Russell (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"An Egg a Month from All Over\", Idris Seabright (F&SF 1952) ; \"Riya’s Foundling\", Algis Budrys (Science Fiction Stories #1 1953) ; \"II: Earthlings All\", Judith Merril ; \"ghosts\", Don Marquis (Archy and Mehitabel, 1927) ; \"Smoke Ghost\", Fritz Leiber (Unknown 1941) ; \"Who Shall I Say Is Calling?\", August Derleth (F&SF 1952) ; \"The Gnarly Man\", L. Sprague de Camp (Unknown 1939) ; \"The Temptation of Harringay\", H. G. Wells (The St. James’s Gazette 1895) ; \"The Ultimate Egoist\", Theodore Sturgeon (Unknown 1941) ; \"Rope Enough\", John Collier (The New Yorker 1939) ; \"III: Tomorrow Will Be Better?\", Judith Merril ; \"Liar!\", Isaac Asimov (Astounding 1941) ; \"Who Knows His Brother\", Graham Doar (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"Crucifixus Etiam\", Walter M. Miller, Jr. (Astounding 1953) ",
"Human Enhancement\n Human Enhancement (2009) is a non-fiction book edited by philosopher Nick Bostrom and philosopher and bioethicist Julian Savulescu. Savulescu and Bostrom write about the ethical implications of human enhancement and to what extent it is worth striving towards.",
"Only Human (Cheryl song)\n \"Only Human\" is a song by English recording artist Cheryl from her fourth studio album of the same name (2014). It was released on 22 March 2015 through Polydor Records as the third single from the album. \"Only Human\" is an electronic ballad, written by Matt Schwartz, Jo Perry and Cass Lowe, whilst produced by Schwartz. Lyrically, it finds Cheryl singing about the inspiration to forgive yourself for being human and live your best life in spite of everything. \"Only Human\" received positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its production and called it her best ballad to date. \"Only Human\" was remixed for ",
"Team Human\n Team Human is a young adult novel co-written by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan. It was published in 2012 by Harper Teen, a division of Harper Collins. The book came out of the authors' shared love of vampire stories, and is both parody and celebration of the genre. The book is dedicated to a long list of authors who have written in the genre, including Stephen King, Stephenie Meyer, Anne Rice, Bram Stoker, and Larbalestier's husband Scott Westerfeld.",
"Human Is\n \"Human Is\" is a science fiction short story by American writer Philip K. Dick. It was first published in Startling Stories, Winter 1955. The plot centers on the crisis facing a woman whose cold and emotionally abusive husband returns from a survey mission to the dying planet Rexor IV, changed for the better—his psyche was replaced by a Rexorian, glad to have escaped the confines of its dying planet. The story was adapted by Jessica Mecklenburg for an episode of the 2017 TV series, Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams.",
"The World Without Us\n The book was first published on July 10, 2007, as a hardback in the United States by St. Martin's Thomas Dunne Books, in United Kingdom by Virgin Books and in Canada by HarperCollins. The paperback was released in July 2008. It has been translated and published in Denmark by Borgen as Verden uden os, France by Groupe Flammarion as Homo disparitus, in Germany by Piper as Die Welt ohne uns, in Portugal by Estrela Polar as O Mundo Sem Nós, in Italy by Einaudi as Il mondo senza di noi, in Poland by CKA as Świat bez nas, and in Japan by Hayakawa Publishing as Jinrui ga kieta sekai (人類が消えた世界; \"A World where the Human Race has Disappeared\"). Pete Garceau designed the cover art for the American release, which one critic said was \"a ",
"Only Human (novel)\n The presence of a Neanderthal on present-day Earth alerts the Doctor, Rose and Jack to the fact that someone is meddling with time. In order to learn the truth, they must travel back 28,000 years, where they meet humans of the past and future — and something far, far worse.",
"Only Human (Example song)\n \"Only Human\" is a song by British singer Example. It was released through Epic Records as an instant download when pre-ordering his fifth studio album Live Life Living. The song is written and produced by Example, Sheldrake and Alf Bamford.",
"Christopher Potter (author)\n His first book, You Are Here, was published in 2009 by Hutchinson (Random House) in the UK and HarperCollins in America. It was translated into 15 languages. \"One of the best popular science books I have ever read,\" wrote Stuart Jeffries in the Guardian. The Sunday Times described it as \"One of the most entertaining and thoughtful pop-science books to be published for years.\" Potter's second book, How to Make a Human Being, was published in 2014 by Fourth Estate. \"A sort of commonplace book full of paradox and conflicting ideas, shocking facts and redemptive anecdotes, turbulent with two or three millennia of human thought,\" wrote The Guardian. His third book, The Earth Gazers, was published in 2018 by Head of Zeus in the UK and Pegasus in America. The Times described it as \"A fresh and elegantly wrought account of mankind’s journey from firing lumps of jerry-rigged metal from cabbage fields to crunching around in the dust of another world.\"",
"Matt Ridley\n is often impeded by politicians. Ridley makes his case by examining historical examples, rather than appealing solely to abstract principles. Written jointly with Alina Chan, it was published in November 2021. Ridley is best known as the author of a number of popular science books, listed below. The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature, 1993 The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation, 1996 Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters, 1999 Nature via Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human, 2003 (also later released under the title The Agile Gene: How ",
"The One and Only Ivan\n The One and Only Ivan is a 2012 novel written by Katherine Applegate and illustrated by Patricia Castelao. It is about a silverback gorilla named Ivan who lived in a cage at a mall, and is written from Ivan's point of view. In 2013 it was named the winner of the Newbery Medal. It has won several other awards and is currently nominated to several reading lists. It was followed in 2020 by The One and Only Bob, presented from the point of view of Ivan's best friend, the dog Bob."
] |
Who is the author of Out of the Dark? | [
"Welwyn Wilton Katz"
] | author | Out of the Dark (Wilton Katz novel) | 5,360,441 | 68 | [
{
"id": "1750909",
"title": "Out of the Dark (Weber novel)",
"text": " Out of the Dark is an alien invasion science fiction novel by David Weber released by Tor Books on September 28, 2010. It is an extended version of the short story of the same name published in the 2010 anthology Warriors edited by Gardner Dozois and George R. R. Martin. A sequel, titled Into the Light, was published more than a decade later in January 2021.",
"score": "1.9681871"
},
{
"id": "31154387",
"title": "Out of the Dark (Wilton Katz novel)",
"text": " Out of the Dark (1995) is a children's novel by Canadian author Welwyn Wilton Katz. It centres on a young boy who had recently lost his mother, and who has just moved with his remaining family to a small village near L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland. The book deals with his attempts to come to grips with his mother's death, his difficulty settling into his new home, his escapist fantasies about the long-ago Viking settlers of the area, and how these three strands interact. The novel was nominated for a Governor General's Award.",
"score": "1.8124132"
},
{
"id": "7442323",
"title": "David Weber bibliography",
"text": "1) Out of the Dark (September 2010; ISBN: 978-0-7653-2412-2) is an extended version of the 78-page story of the same name in the anthology Warriors (2010), edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois. ISBN: 978-0-7653-2048-3. ; 2) Into the Light (January 2021; ISBN: 9780765331458), coauthored with Chris Kennedy, is a sequel to Out of the Dark. ",
"score": "1.7973045"
},
{
"id": "15718473",
"title": "Out of Darkness (novel)",
"text": " Out of Darkness is a 2015 historical young adult novel by Ashley Hope Pérez. The novel chronicles a love affair between a teenage Mexican American girl and a teenage African-American boy in 1930s New London, Texas, occurring right up to the 1937 New London School explosion. Juan Castillo of NBC News wrote that Out of Darkness \"stares unflinchingly at racism, classism, segregation and the people who live on the margins of society.\" The book was released on September 1, 2015.",
"score": "1.7711563"
},
{
"id": "13905500",
"title": "Out of the Dark (Curtiss novel)",
"text": " Out of the Dark (1964) is a thriller novel by Ursula Curtiss, about how a prank call by a couple of teenagers ends up with a murderer on their trail. In 1965, the novel was filmed as I Saw What You Did, directed by William Castle and starring Joan Crawford; and again in 1988 for television with the same title, starring Shawnee Smith, Tammy Lauren and David and Robert Carradine.",
"score": "1.7677737"
},
{
"id": "1750916",
"title": "Out of the Dark (Weber novel)",
"text": "Master Sergeant Stephen Buchevsky: A U.S. Marine initially stationed in Afghanistan. ; Dave Dvorak: The owner of an indoor shooting range ; Rob Wilson: A former U.S. Marine sergeant, Dvorak's brother in law ; Major Dan \"Longbow\" Torino: A U.S. Air Force pilot flying the F-22 Raptor ; President Harriet Palmer: The President of the United States ; Mircea Basarab: A Romanian community leader with a mysterious past. ",
"score": "1.7513305"
},
{
"id": "1750919",
"title": "Out of the Dark (Weber novel)",
"text": " A review by Publishers Weekly says that \"Weber pulls off this conceit in audacious style with a focus on military-powered action that will thrill fans of his Honor Harrington series, and he keeps the pedal to the metal right up to the almost unbelievable conclusion.\" Booklist criticized the action scenes as \"redundant and overburdened with long lists of munitions model numbers\", the difficulty of distinguishing between most characters, and the introduction of vampires late into the story.",
"score": "1.7365835"
},
{
"id": "15718475",
"title": "Out of Darkness (novel)",
"text": " The book includes various pages colored black and some black-and-white photographs. In the sections before the plot's climax the pages have increasing amounts of white space.",
"score": "1.7136548"
},
{
"id": "15718477",
"title": "Out of Darkness (novel)",
"text": " Pérez grew up in a community in proximity to New London. An alumna of the University of Texas at Austin, she teaches literature at Ohio State University, and she previously taught at César Chávez High School in Houston. She chose to write historical fiction as it was something different from her previous work.",
"score": "1.7096057"
},
{
"id": "9972208",
"title": "Anne Rice",
"text": "Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession (2008) ",
"score": "1.7038023"
},
{
"id": "10638562",
"title": "Out of the Dark (1989 film)",
"text": " Out of the Dark is a 1989 American erotic comedy horror film starring Karen Witter. The film is notable for being the last acting credit of the drag queen Divine, who died slightly over a year before its release.",
"score": "1.6978352"
},
{
"id": "13541809",
"title": "Out of the Dark (song)",
"text": " \"Out of the Dark\" is a song by Austrian singer Falco from his eighth studio album Out of the Dark (Into the Light). The song was also released as a single. Both the album and the single were released posthumously in 1998. The song was written by Falco and Torsten Börger. It was produced by Börger. The song reached No. 2 in Germany and Austria and No. 3 in Switzerland.",
"score": "1.6965578"
},
{
"id": "10256650",
"title": "Out of the Darkness (1915 film)",
"text": " Out of the Darkness is a 1915 American drama silent film directed by George Melford and written by Hector Turnbull. The film stars Charlotte Walker, Thomas Meighan, Marjorie Daw, Hal Clements, Tom Forman and Loyola O'Connor. The film was released on September 9, 1915, by Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.6882856"
},
{
"id": "31599957",
"title": "Wesley Strick",
"text": "\"Out There in the Dark\"; Wesley Strick; Thomas Dunne Books (February 7, 2006); ISBN: 0-312-34381-7 ",
"score": "1.6755999"
},
{
"id": "793731",
"title": "Out of the Darkness (1985 film)",
"text": " Out of the Darkness is a 1985 American made-for-television crime thriller film about the pursuit of the serial killer David Berkowitz by New York City detective Ed Zigo played by Martin Sheen.",
"score": "1.6712204"
},
{
"id": "25053124",
"title": "Out of the Dark (2014 film)",
"text": "Julia Stiles as Sarah Harriman ; Scott Speedman as Paul Harriman ; Stephen Rea as Jordan ; Pixie Davies as Hannah Harriman ; Alejandro Furth as Dr. Andres Contreras Jr. ; Guillermo Morales Vitola ",
"score": "1.6453478"
},
{
"id": "25053118",
"title": "Out of the Dark (2014 film)",
"text": " Out of the Dark (Spanish: Aguas rojas) is a 2014 English-language supernatural thriller film starring Julia Stiles, Scott Speedman, and Stephen Rea. The independent Spanish-Colombian co-production is directed by Lluís Quílez based on a screenplay by Alex Pastor, David Pastor, and Javier Gullón. Filming took place in Colombia between April 2013 and July 2013, after which it entered post-production. The film premiered at Germany's Fantasy Filmfest on August 27, 2014.",
"score": "1.6447556"
},
{
"id": "15141055",
"title": "In the Dark of the Night (novel)",
"text": " In the Dark of the Night is a thriller horror novel by author John Saul, published by Ballantine Books on July 18, 2006. The novel follows the story of teenagers who find various objects once owned by serial killers, and they soon become possessed by the spirits that haunt them.",
"score": "1.6322155"
},
{
"id": "25053125",
"title": "Out of the Dark (2014 film)",
"text": " Out of the Dark is directed by Lluís Quílez based on a screenplay by Alex Pastor, David Pastor, and Javier Gullón. The film is a Spanish-Colombian co-production. Out of the Dark is Colombia-based Dynamo's first English-language production. Participant Media fully financed the production, which has a budget of under US$10 million after subsidies and tax breaks from the production companies' countries. Filming began in Bogota, Colombia in late April 2013. By July 2013, the film entered post-production.",
"score": "1.6246033"
},
{
"id": "10256652",
"title": "Out of the Darkness (1915 film)",
"text": "Charlotte Walker as Helen Scott ; Thomas Meighan as\tHarvey Brooks ; Marjorie Daw as Jennie Sands ; Hal Clements as John Scott ; Tom Forman as Tom Jameson ; Loyola O'Connor as Mrs. Sands ",
"score": "1.6165984"
}
] | [
"Out of the Dark (Weber novel)\n Out of the Dark is an alien invasion science fiction novel by David Weber released by Tor Books on September 28, 2010. It is an extended version of the short story of the same name published in the 2010 anthology Warriors edited by Gardner Dozois and George R. R. Martin. A sequel, titled Into the Light, was published more than a decade later in January 2021.",
"Out of the Dark (Wilton Katz novel)\n Out of the Dark (1995) is a children's novel by Canadian author Welwyn Wilton Katz. It centres on a young boy who had recently lost his mother, and who has just moved with his remaining family to a small village near L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland. The book deals with his attempts to come to grips with his mother's death, his difficulty settling into his new home, his escapist fantasies about the long-ago Viking settlers of the area, and how these three strands interact. The novel was nominated for a Governor General's Award.",
"David Weber bibliography\n1) Out of the Dark (September 2010; ISBN: 978-0-7653-2412-2) is an extended version of the 78-page story of the same name in the anthology Warriors (2010), edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois. ISBN: 978-0-7653-2048-3. ; 2) Into the Light (January 2021; ISBN: 9780765331458), coauthored with Chris Kennedy, is a sequel to Out of the Dark. ",
"Out of Darkness (novel)\n Out of Darkness is a 2015 historical young adult novel by Ashley Hope Pérez. The novel chronicles a love affair between a teenage Mexican American girl and a teenage African-American boy in 1930s New London, Texas, occurring right up to the 1937 New London School explosion. Juan Castillo of NBC News wrote that Out of Darkness \"stares unflinchingly at racism, classism, segregation and the people who live on the margins of society.\" The book was released on September 1, 2015.",
"Out of the Dark (Curtiss novel)\n Out of the Dark (1964) is a thriller novel by Ursula Curtiss, about how a prank call by a couple of teenagers ends up with a murderer on their trail. In 1965, the novel was filmed as I Saw What You Did, directed by William Castle and starring Joan Crawford; and again in 1988 for television with the same title, starring Shawnee Smith, Tammy Lauren and David and Robert Carradine.",
"Out of the Dark (Weber novel)\nMaster Sergeant Stephen Buchevsky: A U.S. Marine initially stationed in Afghanistan. ; Dave Dvorak: The owner of an indoor shooting range ; Rob Wilson: A former U.S. Marine sergeant, Dvorak's brother in law ; Major Dan \"Longbow\" Torino: A U.S. Air Force pilot flying the F-22 Raptor ; President Harriet Palmer: The President of the United States ; Mircea Basarab: A Romanian community leader with a mysterious past. ",
"Out of the Dark (Weber novel)\n A review by Publishers Weekly says that \"Weber pulls off this conceit in audacious style with a focus on military-powered action that will thrill fans of his Honor Harrington series, and he keeps the pedal to the metal right up to the almost unbelievable conclusion.\" Booklist criticized the action scenes as \"redundant and overburdened with long lists of munitions model numbers\", the difficulty of distinguishing between most characters, and the introduction of vampires late into the story.",
"Out of Darkness (novel)\n The book includes various pages colored black and some black-and-white photographs. In the sections before the plot's climax the pages have increasing amounts of white space.",
"Out of Darkness (novel)\n Pérez grew up in a community in proximity to New London. An alumna of the University of Texas at Austin, she teaches literature at Ohio State University, and she previously taught at César Chávez High School in Houston. She chose to write historical fiction as it was something different from her previous work.",
"Anne Rice\nCalled Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession (2008) ",
"Out of the Dark (1989 film)\n Out of the Dark is a 1989 American erotic comedy horror film starring Karen Witter. The film is notable for being the last acting credit of the drag queen Divine, who died slightly over a year before its release.",
"Out of the Dark (song)\n \"Out of the Dark\" is a song by Austrian singer Falco from his eighth studio album Out of the Dark (Into the Light). The song was also released as a single. Both the album and the single were released posthumously in 1998. The song was written by Falco and Torsten Börger. It was produced by Börger. The song reached No. 2 in Germany and Austria and No. 3 in Switzerland.",
"Out of the Darkness (1915 film)\n Out of the Darkness is a 1915 American drama silent film directed by George Melford and written by Hector Turnbull. The film stars Charlotte Walker, Thomas Meighan, Marjorie Daw, Hal Clements, Tom Forman and Loyola O'Connor. The film was released on September 9, 1915, by Paramount Pictures.",
"Wesley Strick\n\"Out There in the Dark\"; Wesley Strick; Thomas Dunne Books (February 7, 2006); ISBN: 0-312-34381-7 ",
"Out of the Darkness (1985 film)\n Out of the Darkness is a 1985 American made-for-television crime thriller film about the pursuit of the serial killer David Berkowitz by New York City detective Ed Zigo played by Martin Sheen.",
"Out of the Dark (2014 film)\nJulia Stiles as Sarah Harriman ; Scott Speedman as Paul Harriman ; Stephen Rea as Jordan ; Pixie Davies as Hannah Harriman ; Alejandro Furth as Dr. Andres Contreras Jr. ; Guillermo Morales Vitola ",
"Out of the Dark (2014 film)\n Out of the Dark (Spanish: Aguas rojas) is a 2014 English-language supernatural thriller film starring Julia Stiles, Scott Speedman, and Stephen Rea. The independent Spanish-Colombian co-production is directed by Lluís Quílez based on a screenplay by Alex Pastor, David Pastor, and Javier Gullón. Filming took place in Colombia between April 2013 and July 2013, after which it entered post-production. The film premiered at Germany's Fantasy Filmfest on August 27, 2014.",
"In the Dark of the Night (novel)\n In the Dark of the Night is a thriller horror novel by author John Saul, published by Ballantine Books on July 18, 2006. The novel follows the story of teenagers who find various objects once owned by serial killers, and they soon become possessed by the spirits that haunt them.",
"Out of the Dark (2014 film)\n Out of the Dark is directed by Lluís Quílez based on a screenplay by Alex Pastor, David Pastor, and Javier Gullón. The film is a Spanish-Colombian co-production. Out of the Dark is Colombia-based Dynamo's first English-language production. Participant Media fully financed the production, which has a budget of under US$10 million after subsidies and tax breaks from the production companies' countries. Filming began in Bogota, Colombia in late April 2013. By July 2013, the film entered post-production.",
"Out of the Darkness (1915 film)\nCharlotte Walker as Helen Scott ; Thomas Meighan as\tHarvey Brooks ; Marjorie Daw as Jennie Sands ; Hal Clements as John Scott ; Tom Forman as Tom Jameson ; Loyola O'Connor as Mrs. Sands "
] |
Who is the author of The National Dream? | [
"Pierre Berton",
"Pierre Francis de Marigny Berton"
] | author | The National Dream (book) | 5,943,787 | 84 | [
{
"id": "3484118",
"title": "American Dream, Global Nightmare",
"text": " American Dream, Global Nightmare is a book by Ziauddin Sardar and Merryl Wyn Davies (Icon Books, 2004). It presents the neoconservative ideology of Pax Americana as ten laws.",
"score": "1.543558"
},
{
"id": "2679586",
"title": "Who Stole the American Dream?",
"text": " Who Stole the American Dream? is a non-fiction book by the American author and journalist Hedrick Smith published in 2012 by Random House. It describes the consolidation of wealth in the United States, and the dismantling of the middle class. As a result, the American Dream—a national ethos, or a set of ideals in which freedom includes the opportunity for prosperity and success, and an upward social mobility achieved through hard work—is becoming increasingly unattainable. Although Smith's distinguished journalistic career includes covering the Vietnam War, the Pentagon Papers, and the civil rights movement, serving as the Moscow Bureau Chief for the New York Times, writing a #1 bestseller, and working on 26 prime-time specials for PBS, he views this book as \"'absolutely' his most significant achievement.\"",
"score": "1.5102222"
},
{
"id": "12667743",
"title": "Peter Brimelow",
"text": " In an article in Maclean's which was published in 2011, the author John Geddes says that Brimelow's book The Patriot Game: National Dreams and Political Realities \"offered a bracingly of-the-moment conservative critique of Canada,\" and said that it was instrumental in shaping the thought process of Canadian Prime Minister Mr. Stephen Harper.",
"score": "1.4800417"
},
{
"id": "300183",
"title": "Eugene Ludwig",
"text": " Ludwig is the editor of The Vanishing American Dream, a book that provides comments from experts across the political spectrum on the economic challenges facing lower- and middle-income Americans. The book examines how traditional economic measures like the unemployment rate and GDP are masking a crisis for millions of lower- and middle-income families, who struggle to afford health care, housing, and education and occupy jobs that cannot help them reverse the downward slide. The book, to be published September 22, 2020, was the outcome of a 2019 Yale Law School symposium organized by Ludwig. It includes commentary from 23 experts, ",
"score": "1.4733653"
},
{
"id": "29664279",
"title": "Barack Obama",
"text": "2006: The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream (read by the author), Random House Audio, ISBN: 978-0-7393-6641-7 ; 2020: A Promised Land (read by the author) ",
"score": "1.462232"
},
{
"id": "9875807",
"title": "Martin Dressler",
"text": " Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer is a 1996 novel by Steven Millhauser. It won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was a finalist for the 1996 National Book Award. The novel follows the exploits of a young, optimistic entrepreneur, the eponymous Martin Dressler, in late nineteenth century New York City. It vividly evokes its time and place through elaborate description.",
"score": "1.4581907"
},
{
"id": "2247729",
"title": "The Dream of Reality",
"text": " The first edition of the book was published in 1986 by W. W. Norton. A second edition of the book was published in 2001 by Springer with some corrections from von Foerster.",
"score": "1.4570258"
},
{
"id": "5251625",
"title": "An American Dream (memoir)",
"text": " An American Dream: The Life of an African American Soldier and POW Who Spent Twelve Years in Communist China is a memoir by Corporal Clarence Adams posthumously published by the University of Massachusetts Press and edited by Della Adams and Louis H. Carlson.",
"score": "1.4505818"
},
{
"id": "31882820",
"title": "The Mexican Dream, or, The Interrupted Thought of Amerindian Civilizations",
"text": " 11 editions published between 1988 and 2004 in 5 languages and held by 835 libraries worldwide.",
"score": "1.4471486"
},
{
"id": "1783488",
"title": "The Dream Merchants",
"text": " The Dream Merchants is an American novel written by Harold Robbins and published in 1949. Set in the early 20th century, the book is a \"rags-to-riches\" story of a penniless young man who goes to Hollywood and builds a great film studio. A former Universal Studios employee, author Harold Robbins based the main character on Universal's founder, Carl Laemmle. With the Hollywood history in the backdrop, it is a love story.",
"score": "1.4442961"
},
{
"id": "27197735",
"title": "National Action Network",
"text": " National Action Network organized the 'national action to realize the dream' march in honor of the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, on August 24, 2013. The march was led by Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III with: US Attorney General Eric Holder; Congressman John Lewis; Nancy Pelosi, House Democratic Leader; Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer; the families of Trayvon Martin and Emmett Till; and many more. National Action Network brought down 1,000 buses carrying activists and marchers.",
"score": "1.4390264"
},
{
"id": "1265666",
"title": "The Audacity of Hope",
"text": " The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream is the second book written by Barack Obama. It became number one on both the New York Times and Amazon.com bestsellers lists in the fall of 2006, after Obama had been endorsed by Oprah Winfrey. In the book, Obama expounds on many of the subjects that became part of his 2008 campaign for the presidency. The book advance from the publisher totalled $1.9 million contracted for three books. Obama announced his presidential campaign on February 10, 2007, a little more than three months after the book's release.",
"score": "1.4351778"
},
{
"id": "27599934",
"title": "Enrico Arrigoni",
"text": "The totalitarian nightmare (1975) ; The lunacy of the Superman (1977) ; Adventures in the country of the monoliths (1981) ; Freedom: my dream First published by the Libertarian Book Club in 1937, reprinted by Western World Press in 1986, and LBC Books (Little Black Cart), March 2012. ",
"score": "1.4299924"
},
{
"id": "3995560",
"title": "An American Dream (novel)",
"text": " An American Dream is a 1965 novel by American author Norman Mailer. It was published by Dial Press. Mailer wrote it in serialized form for Esquire, consciously attempting to resurrect the methodology used by Charles Dickens and other earlier novelists, with Mailer writing each chapter against monthly deadlines. The book is written in a poetic style heavy with metaphor that creates unique and hypnotising narrative and dialogue. The novel's action takes place over 32 hours in the life of its protagonist Stephen Rojack. Rojack is a decorated war-hero, former congressman, talk-show host, and university professor. He is depicted as the metaphorical embodiment of the American Dream.",
"score": "1.4297189"
},
{
"id": "32499858",
"title": "The Law of Dreams",
"text": " The Law of Dreams is a historical fiction novel about the Great Famine of Ireland by Canadian author Peter Behrens. Published in 2006 by House of Anansi Press, it was the recipient of that year's Governor General's Award for English language fiction.",
"score": "1.4293008"
},
{
"id": "31055666",
"title": "William Hopper (politician)",
"text": " In 2006, he wrote with his brother, Kenneth Hopper, a study of the Protestant work ethic in the United States, called The Puritan Gift: Triumph, Collapse and Revival of an American Dream. A second hardback edition was published in 2008. In 2009 a paperback edition was published with the new subtitle: Reclaiming the American Dream amidst Global Financial Chaos. While writing a sequel, Hopper was targeted by fraudsters posing as bank staff and lost £1,000; he persuaded the fraudsters to give him £300 back for spending money, and eventually recouped his loss from his own bank, thereby making a profit.",
"score": "1.4286752"
},
{
"id": "28037059",
"title": "Michael Foster (American writer)",
"text": " sentences of his prose style, in his method of consistent understatement, in his attitude of weary and rather self-conscious disillusionment, he has aligned himself with the school of Hemingway and his imitators. The second novel, American Dream, came in 1937. American Dream told the story of \"a disillusioned newspaperman who discovers through old family letters what America meant to the writers and what America should mean to him. Several scenes are reminiscent of the tawdry political atmosphere rendered in Ben Hecht's and Charles MacArthur's 1928 play, The Front Page.\". Los Angeles Times reviewer Milton Merlin said that the work was: \"not an ",
"score": "1.4260623"
},
{
"id": "13125174",
"title": "Chinese Dream",
"text": " Author Helen H. Wang was one of the first to connect the Chinese Dream with the American Dream. In her book The Chinese Dream, Wang wrote: \"The Chinese Dream, taking its title from the American Dream, alluding to an easily identifiable concept...\" Wang attempts to demonstrate that the Chinese people have similar dreams as those of the American people. \"This new [Chinese] middle class,\" Wang wrote, \"which barely existed a decade ago, will reach the size of more than two Americas in a decade or two. They number in the hundreds of millions, with the same hopes and dreams that you and I have: to have a better life, to give our children an even better life....\" Wang has also claimed that \"Chinese people must define their own dream.\" According to Shi Yuzhi, a professor at the National University of Singapore, the Chinese Dream is about Chinese prosperity, collective effort, socialism, and national glory. Shi compared the relationship between the phrase and the American Dream.",
"score": "1.4235439"
},
{
"id": "26459424",
"title": "Dreamland: A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation",
"text": " Dreamland: A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation (in the original Draumalandið — Sjálfshjálparbók handa hræddri þjóð) is a book by the Icelandic author Andri Snær Magnason. It became the number one best-selling book in Iceland in 2006, and was winner of the Icelandic Literary Award, and the Icelandic Bookseller Prize the same year. The English edition of the book has a foreword by the Icelandic artist Björk.",
"score": "1.4193493"
},
{
"id": "8312536",
"title": "Roland Marchand",
"text": " Marchand was the author of three American history books: The American Peace Movement and Social Reform, 1898-1918, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940, and Creating the Corporate Soul: The Rise of Public Relations and Corporate Imagery in American Big Business. Advertising the American Dream has been called \"a model of conceptual precision and scrupulous research\" by Susan Strasser.",
"score": "1.4193405"
}
] | [
"American Dream, Global Nightmare\n American Dream, Global Nightmare is a book by Ziauddin Sardar and Merryl Wyn Davies (Icon Books, 2004). It presents the neoconservative ideology of Pax Americana as ten laws.",
"Who Stole the American Dream?\n Who Stole the American Dream? is a non-fiction book by the American author and journalist Hedrick Smith published in 2012 by Random House. It describes the consolidation of wealth in the United States, and the dismantling of the middle class. As a result, the American Dream—a national ethos, or a set of ideals in which freedom includes the opportunity for prosperity and success, and an upward social mobility achieved through hard work—is becoming increasingly unattainable. Although Smith's distinguished journalistic career includes covering the Vietnam War, the Pentagon Papers, and the civil rights movement, serving as the Moscow Bureau Chief for the New York Times, writing a #1 bestseller, and working on 26 prime-time specials for PBS, he views this book as \"'absolutely' his most significant achievement.\"",
"Peter Brimelow\n In an article in Maclean's which was published in 2011, the author John Geddes says that Brimelow's book The Patriot Game: National Dreams and Political Realities \"offered a bracingly of-the-moment conservative critique of Canada,\" and said that it was instrumental in shaping the thought process of Canadian Prime Minister Mr. Stephen Harper.",
"Eugene Ludwig\n Ludwig is the editor of The Vanishing American Dream, a book that provides comments from experts across the political spectrum on the economic challenges facing lower- and middle-income Americans. The book examines how traditional economic measures like the unemployment rate and GDP are masking a crisis for millions of lower- and middle-income families, who struggle to afford health care, housing, and education and occupy jobs that cannot help them reverse the downward slide. The book, to be published September 22, 2020, was the outcome of a 2019 Yale Law School symposium organized by Ludwig. It includes commentary from 23 experts, ",
"Barack Obama\n2006: The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream (read by the author), Random House Audio, ISBN: 978-0-7393-6641-7 ; 2020: A Promised Land (read by the author) ",
"Martin Dressler\n Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer is a 1996 novel by Steven Millhauser. It won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was a finalist for the 1996 National Book Award. The novel follows the exploits of a young, optimistic entrepreneur, the eponymous Martin Dressler, in late nineteenth century New York City. It vividly evokes its time and place through elaborate description.",
"The Dream of Reality\n The first edition of the book was published in 1986 by W. W. Norton. A second edition of the book was published in 2001 by Springer with some corrections from von Foerster.",
"An American Dream (memoir)\n An American Dream: The Life of an African American Soldier and POW Who Spent Twelve Years in Communist China is a memoir by Corporal Clarence Adams posthumously published by the University of Massachusetts Press and edited by Della Adams and Louis H. Carlson.",
"The Mexican Dream, or, The Interrupted Thought of Amerindian Civilizations\n 11 editions published between 1988 and 2004 in 5 languages and held by 835 libraries worldwide.",
"The Dream Merchants\n The Dream Merchants is an American novel written by Harold Robbins and published in 1949. Set in the early 20th century, the book is a \"rags-to-riches\" story of a penniless young man who goes to Hollywood and builds a great film studio. A former Universal Studios employee, author Harold Robbins based the main character on Universal's founder, Carl Laemmle. With the Hollywood history in the backdrop, it is a love story.",
"National Action Network\n National Action Network organized the 'national action to realize the dream' march in honor of the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, on August 24, 2013. The march was led by Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III with: US Attorney General Eric Holder; Congressman John Lewis; Nancy Pelosi, House Democratic Leader; Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer; the families of Trayvon Martin and Emmett Till; and many more. National Action Network brought down 1,000 buses carrying activists and marchers.",
"The Audacity of Hope\n The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream is the second book written by Barack Obama. It became number one on both the New York Times and Amazon.com bestsellers lists in the fall of 2006, after Obama had been endorsed by Oprah Winfrey. In the book, Obama expounds on many of the subjects that became part of his 2008 campaign for the presidency. The book advance from the publisher totalled $1.9 million contracted for three books. Obama announced his presidential campaign on February 10, 2007, a little more than three months after the book's release.",
"Enrico Arrigoni\nThe totalitarian nightmare (1975) ; The lunacy of the Superman (1977) ; Adventures in the country of the monoliths (1981) ; Freedom: my dream First published by the Libertarian Book Club in 1937, reprinted by Western World Press in 1986, and LBC Books (Little Black Cart), March 2012. ",
"An American Dream (novel)\n An American Dream is a 1965 novel by American author Norman Mailer. It was published by Dial Press. Mailer wrote it in serialized form for Esquire, consciously attempting to resurrect the methodology used by Charles Dickens and other earlier novelists, with Mailer writing each chapter against monthly deadlines. The book is written in a poetic style heavy with metaphor that creates unique and hypnotising narrative and dialogue. The novel's action takes place over 32 hours in the life of its protagonist Stephen Rojack. Rojack is a decorated war-hero, former congressman, talk-show host, and university professor. He is depicted as the metaphorical embodiment of the American Dream.",
"The Law of Dreams\n The Law of Dreams is a historical fiction novel about the Great Famine of Ireland by Canadian author Peter Behrens. Published in 2006 by House of Anansi Press, it was the recipient of that year's Governor General's Award for English language fiction.",
"William Hopper (politician)\n In 2006, he wrote with his brother, Kenneth Hopper, a study of the Protestant work ethic in the United States, called The Puritan Gift: Triumph, Collapse and Revival of an American Dream. A second hardback edition was published in 2008. In 2009 a paperback edition was published with the new subtitle: Reclaiming the American Dream amidst Global Financial Chaos. While writing a sequel, Hopper was targeted by fraudsters posing as bank staff and lost £1,000; he persuaded the fraudsters to give him £300 back for spending money, and eventually recouped his loss from his own bank, thereby making a profit.",
"Michael Foster (American writer)\n sentences of his prose style, in his method of consistent understatement, in his attitude of weary and rather self-conscious disillusionment, he has aligned himself with the school of Hemingway and his imitators. The second novel, American Dream, came in 1937. American Dream told the story of \"a disillusioned newspaperman who discovers through old family letters what America meant to the writers and what America should mean to him. Several scenes are reminiscent of the tawdry political atmosphere rendered in Ben Hecht's and Charles MacArthur's 1928 play, The Front Page.\". Los Angeles Times reviewer Milton Merlin said that the work was: \"not an ",
"Chinese Dream\n Author Helen H. Wang was one of the first to connect the Chinese Dream with the American Dream. In her book The Chinese Dream, Wang wrote: \"The Chinese Dream, taking its title from the American Dream, alluding to an easily identifiable concept...\" Wang attempts to demonstrate that the Chinese people have similar dreams as those of the American people. \"This new [Chinese] middle class,\" Wang wrote, \"which barely existed a decade ago, will reach the size of more than two Americas in a decade or two. They number in the hundreds of millions, with the same hopes and dreams that you and I have: to have a better life, to give our children an even better life....\" Wang has also claimed that \"Chinese people must define their own dream.\" According to Shi Yuzhi, a professor at the National University of Singapore, the Chinese Dream is about Chinese prosperity, collective effort, socialism, and national glory. Shi compared the relationship between the phrase and the American Dream.",
"Dreamland: A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation\n Dreamland: A Self-Help Manual for a Frightened Nation (in the original Draumalandið — Sjálfshjálparbók handa hræddri þjóð) is a book by the Icelandic author Andri Snær Magnason. It became the number one best-selling book in Iceland in 2006, and was winner of the Icelandic Literary Award, and the Icelandic Bookseller Prize the same year. The English edition of the book has a foreword by the Icelandic artist Björk.",
"Roland Marchand\n Marchand was the author of three American history books: The American Peace Movement and Social Reform, 1898-1918, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940, and Creating the Corporate Soul: The Rise of Public Relations and Corporate Imagery in American Big Business. Advertising the American Dream has been called \"a model of conceptual precision and scrupulous research\" by Susan Strasser."
] |
Who is the author of Saints of Big Harbour? | [
"Lynn Coady"
] | author | Saints of Big Harbour | 5,669,868 | 48 | [
{
"id": "31875751",
"title": "Saints of Big Harbour",
"text": " Saints of Big Harbour is a novel by Lynn Coady, published in 2002 by Doubleday Canada. It was Coady's first novel to be published in the United States.",
"score": "2.011464"
},
{
"id": "31875752",
"title": "Saints of Big Harbour",
"text": " In Saints of Big Harbour, Coady portrays a small community of Cape Breton Island, found off the coast of Nova Scotia. The book focuses on the perspectives of the main character, Guy Boucher, a fatherless Acadian teenager, and of those who surround him: his alcoholic uncle Isadore, a quietly wise girl named Pam, his draft-dodger English teacher and a group of boys stuck in emotional adolescence. As the story unfolds it becomes clear that Guy lives in a community firmly characterized by clichés of gender, beauty, strength, family and love.",
"score": "1.7760756"
},
{
"id": "30683398",
"title": "The Big Book Of",
"text": " Published in 1997 and written by John Wagner, the Big Book of Martyrs examines the lives and deaths of Christian martyrs, including Saint Valentine, Joan of Arc, Saint Ursula, and Saint George. The last chapter deals with people who have been tortured for their faith in more recent history, demonstrating that religious fervor is not a thing of the past.",
"score": "1.6315084"
},
{
"id": "13163671",
"title": "Andrew Osmond",
"text": " Osmond is the author of cult fiction titles such as Big Fish (2004), High (2004) and Young British Slacker (2006). Big Fish was described by Spike as a must read for wannabe globe-trotters, armchair travellers and mystery fans, alike. Midwest Book Reviews said of Young British Slacker: \"...compels the readers' attention with its unique writing style and tactile-perfect realism in its stream of consciousness thoughts and emotions of a wage slave.\"",
"score": "1.5205411"
},
{
"id": "2649754",
"title": "Harbour Publishing",
"text": " Harbour Publishing is a Canadian independent book publisher. The company was founded in 1974 by Howard and Mary White, and is based in Pender Harbour, a small town on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast. Harbour mainly publishes books on British Columbian history, culture, wildlife and environment. To date, Harbour has published over 600 titles. Harbour Publishing is the exclusive distributor for Nightwood Editions, Bluefield Books and Lost Moose Books. In 2013, the owners of Harbour acquired Douglas & McIntyre.",
"score": "1.4618099"
},
{
"id": "3115473",
"title": "Daniel Wallace (author)",
"text": " Daniel Wallace (born 1959) is an American author. He is best known for his 1998 novel Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions. His other books include Ray in Reverse and The Watermelon King. His stories have also been published in a number of anthologies and magazines, including The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror.",
"score": "1.4452792"
},
{
"id": "25978848",
"title": "Patrick O'Flaherty (writer)",
"text": " Patrick O'Flaherty CM (October 6, 1939 – August 16, 2017) was a Newfoundland and Labrador writer, historian, and academic. He was born in Long Beach, part of Northern Bay, Conception Bay. He received a B.A. and M.A. from Memorial University of Newfoundland, and obtained his Ph.D. from University College London in 1963. After teaching at the University of Manitoba, in 1965 he joined the English department at Memorial, where he was later Professor and Head (1982-1987). He retired in 1995 and held the position of Professor Emeritus. He was married to Marjorie Doyle, a writer and broadcaster, and had three sons from a previous marriage. Patrick O'Flaherty was the author of two books of short stories, Summer of the Greater Yellowlegs (1987) and A Small Place in the Sun (1989), and two novels, Benny's Island (1994) and Priest of God (1989). In 1979 he published The Rock ",
"score": "1.4383347"
},
{
"id": "29909442",
"title": "List of Old Rossallians",
"text": "J. R. Ackerley – author, editor, and memoirist ; Leslie Charteris – creator of The Saint ; J.G. Farrell – novelist and winner of the Booker Prize ; R. Welldon Finn – historical writer ; F. W. Harvey, DCM – poet ; Raymond M. Patterson – explorer and travel writer ; Clive Phillipps-Wolley – author and big game hunter ",
"score": "1.4280733"
},
{
"id": "10006803",
"title": "Edward Steinhardt",
"text": " collective soul, it chronicles the dysfunction of our relationships, the hollowness of our attempts at love, the hopelessness of our ability to connect.\" Jane L. Anton, Ph.D. contributed an Afterword to the book. Artist George Towne contributed the cover art, originally entitled \"Lucio on Tony's Bed.\" Steinhardt's fifth book, Papa's Big Fish: Stories of Youthful Adventure at the Hemingway's in Key West, was his first book which was solely fiction. The book, categorized as historical fiction, has 15 chapters, each chapter being a separate adventure from the viewpoint of eight-year-old protagonist Gig Hemingway, one of Ernest Hemingway's children. The book details Steinhardt's considerable ",
"score": "1.4278215"
},
{
"id": "13744563",
"title": "George John Bond",
"text": " Conference in 1919. Before Bond left Cochrane Street in 1921, he attended the worldwide Ecumenical Conference in London, England, as a representative from Newfoundland. In addition to his clerical work, Bond was an accomplished writer of fiction. In 1887, he published a novel, Skipper George Netman, the story of Newfoundland fishermen and their lives in the fictional outport of Caplin Bight. He wrote a short story, The Castaway of Fish Rock plus other stories of non-fiction essays on the Church's missionary work. Bond's oldest son, Herbert, was chosen as Newfoundland's second Rhodes Scholar in 1905. He was drowned on a surveying expedition in British Columbia in 1910.",
"score": "1.4268941"
},
{
"id": "27542959",
"title": "William H. White (maritime writer)",
"text": "A Press of Canvas (2000) ; A Fine Tops'l Breeze (2001) ; The Evening Gun (2003) In Pursuit of Glory ; The Greater the Honor When Fortune Frowns (2009) 1812 Trilogy: The Isaac Biggs Series The Oliver Baldwin Series Other Books",
"score": "1.4223635"
},
{
"id": "31960639",
"title": "Andrew Farkas",
"text": " Andrew Farkas is the author of a novel, The Big Red Herring (KERNPUNKT Press 2019), and two collections of short fiction, Sunsphere (BlazeVOX [books] 2019) and Self-Titled Debut (Subito Press 2009).",
"score": "1.4118567"
},
{
"id": "11795338",
"title": "Saint (novel)",
"text": " Saint is a 2006 mystery novel written by Ted Dekker. It is the second in the series of the 'Project Showdown' Books which are also called 'The Paradise Novels'.",
"score": "1.4074857"
},
{
"id": "6776790",
"title": "Lynn Coady",
"text": "Strange Heaven (1998) ; Saints of Big Harbour (2002) ; Mean Boy (2006) ; The Antagonist (2011) ; Watching You Without Me (2019) ",
"score": "1.4057615"
},
{
"id": "30544980",
"title": "Bob Hallett",
"text": " Robert \"Bob\" Hallett (born 1966) is a Canadian musician, author, producer, and entrepreneur, best known as a founding member of the Canadian folk rock band Great Big Sea (1993–2013). He is also a native of St. John's, Newfoundland, Hallett co-founded Great Big Sea in 1993, with Alan Doyle, Sean McCann, and Darrell Power. The band sold over a million and half records around the world, over a twenty-year period. Through his company, Kilbride Music, Hallett has managed bands and produced records, radio specials, and live concerts. Hallet is a vocal proponent of talent development within the Newfoundland and East Coast Music Industries, and has authored ",
"score": "1.4036607"
},
{
"id": "12149976",
"title": "Bill Roorbach",
"text": " Bill Roorbach (born August 8, 1953 Chicago, Illinois) is an American novelist, short story and nature writer, memoirist, journalist, blogger and critic. Roorbach has authored fiction and nonfiction works including Big Bend, which won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction and the O. Henry Prize. Roorbach's memoir in nature, Temple Stream, won the Maine Literary Award for Nonfiction, 2005. His novel, Life Among Giants, won the 2013 Maine Literary Award for Fiction.[18] And The Remedy for Love, also a novel, was one of six finalists for the 2014 Kirkus Fiction Prize.. His latest book, The Girl of the Lake, is a short story collection published in June 2017. His novel in progress is Lucky Turtle.",
"score": "1.3926661"
},
{
"id": "10833983",
"title": "Saints (novel)",
"text": " Saints (1984) is a historical fiction novel by Orson Scott Card. It tells the story of the fictional protagonist, Dinah Kirkham, a native of Manchester, England, who immigrates to the United States and becomes one of the plural wives of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Saints was originally published as Woman Of Destiny, contrary to Card's wishes.",
"score": "1.3921478"
},
{
"id": "6093830",
"title": "Jerry Dennis",
"text": " on the faculty of the University of Michigan's Bear River Writers Conference, where he teaches creative non-fiction and nature writing. As of 2014, he is the author of ten books. In 2015 his best known book is The Living Great Lakes, about his trip around the great lakes in a rickety ship. This book appeared on the Michigan Bestseller Book List for October, 2014. In 2014, in response to a pricing dispute between his publisher, MacMillan Press, and Amazon, Dennis set up his own publishing house, Big Maple Press, to produce books which will be sold only through independent booksellers.",
"score": "1.3911271"
},
{
"id": "7024040",
"title": "Paul Eldridge",
"text": " the University of Florence in 1923. He later was an instructor of English literature at Saint John's College in Philadelphia, from 1910-1912, and was a member of the Authors' and Dramatists' League of the Authors' Guild of America. He is best known for collaborating with the American decadent novelist and poet George Sylvester Viereck, who was imprisoned as a Nazi agent in the 1940s, on a trilogy of exotic fantasy novels from 1928 to 1932, My First Two Thousand Years: the Autobiography of the Wandering Jew, Salome: the Wandering Jewess and the Invincible Adam. A highly prolific author, many of his later books were published by E. Haldeman-Julius in his \"Big Blue Books\" series. He died at the age of 94 in a New York City nursing home on July 26, 1982.",
"score": "1.39031"
},
{
"id": "13038008",
"title": "Saint (book)",
"text": " Saint: Why I Should Be Canonized Right Away is a book written by American Catholic radio host Lino Rulli. It was released on September 3, 2013 and is the sequel to Rulli's 2011 book, Sinner.",
"score": "1.3901916"
}
] | [
"Saints of Big Harbour\n Saints of Big Harbour is a novel by Lynn Coady, published in 2002 by Doubleday Canada. It was Coady's first novel to be published in the United States.",
"Saints of Big Harbour\n In Saints of Big Harbour, Coady portrays a small community of Cape Breton Island, found off the coast of Nova Scotia. The book focuses on the perspectives of the main character, Guy Boucher, a fatherless Acadian teenager, and of those who surround him: his alcoholic uncle Isadore, a quietly wise girl named Pam, his draft-dodger English teacher and a group of boys stuck in emotional adolescence. As the story unfolds it becomes clear that Guy lives in a community firmly characterized by clichés of gender, beauty, strength, family and love.",
"The Big Book Of\n Published in 1997 and written by John Wagner, the Big Book of Martyrs examines the lives and deaths of Christian martyrs, including Saint Valentine, Joan of Arc, Saint Ursula, and Saint George. The last chapter deals with people who have been tortured for their faith in more recent history, demonstrating that religious fervor is not a thing of the past.",
"Andrew Osmond\n Osmond is the author of cult fiction titles such as Big Fish (2004), High (2004) and Young British Slacker (2006). Big Fish was described by Spike as a must read for wannabe globe-trotters, armchair travellers and mystery fans, alike. Midwest Book Reviews said of Young British Slacker: \"...compels the readers' attention with its unique writing style and tactile-perfect realism in its stream of consciousness thoughts and emotions of a wage slave.\"",
"Harbour Publishing\n Harbour Publishing is a Canadian independent book publisher. The company was founded in 1974 by Howard and Mary White, and is based in Pender Harbour, a small town on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast. Harbour mainly publishes books on British Columbian history, culture, wildlife and environment. To date, Harbour has published over 600 titles. Harbour Publishing is the exclusive distributor for Nightwood Editions, Bluefield Books and Lost Moose Books. In 2013, the owners of Harbour acquired Douglas & McIntyre.",
"Daniel Wallace (author)\n Daniel Wallace (born 1959) is an American author. He is best known for his 1998 novel Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions. His other books include Ray in Reverse and The Watermelon King. His stories have also been published in a number of anthologies and magazines, including The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror.",
"Patrick O'Flaherty (writer)\n Patrick O'Flaherty CM (October 6, 1939 – August 16, 2017) was a Newfoundland and Labrador writer, historian, and academic. He was born in Long Beach, part of Northern Bay, Conception Bay. He received a B.A. and M.A. from Memorial University of Newfoundland, and obtained his Ph.D. from University College London in 1963. After teaching at the University of Manitoba, in 1965 he joined the English department at Memorial, where he was later Professor and Head (1982-1987). He retired in 1995 and held the position of Professor Emeritus. He was married to Marjorie Doyle, a writer and broadcaster, and had three sons from a previous marriage. Patrick O'Flaherty was the author of two books of short stories, Summer of the Greater Yellowlegs (1987) and A Small Place in the Sun (1989), and two novels, Benny's Island (1994) and Priest of God (1989). In 1979 he published The Rock ",
"List of Old Rossallians\nJ. R. Ackerley – author, editor, and memoirist ; Leslie Charteris – creator of The Saint ; J.G. Farrell – novelist and winner of the Booker Prize ; R. Welldon Finn – historical writer ; F. W. Harvey, DCM – poet ; Raymond M. Patterson – explorer and travel writer ; Clive Phillipps-Wolley – author and big game hunter ",
"Edward Steinhardt\n collective soul, it chronicles the dysfunction of our relationships, the hollowness of our attempts at love, the hopelessness of our ability to connect.\" Jane L. Anton, Ph.D. contributed an Afterword to the book. Artist George Towne contributed the cover art, originally entitled \"Lucio on Tony's Bed.\" Steinhardt's fifth book, Papa's Big Fish: Stories of Youthful Adventure at the Hemingway's in Key West, was his first book which was solely fiction. The book, categorized as historical fiction, has 15 chapters, each chapter being a separate adventure from the viewpoint of eight-year-old protagonist Gig Hemingway, one of Ernest Hemingway's children. The book details Steinhardt's considerable ",
"George John Bond\n Conference in 1919. Before Bond left Cochrane Street in 1921, he attended the worldwide Ecumenical Conference in London, England, as a representative from Newfoundland. In addition to his clerical work, Bond was an accomplished writer of fiction. In 1887, he published a novel, Skipper George Netman, the story of Newfoundland fishermen and their lives in the fictional outport of Caplin Bight. He wrote a short story, The Castaway of Fish Rock plus other stories of non-fiction essays on the Church's missionary work. Bond's oldest son, Herbert, was chosen as Newfoundland's second Rhodes Scholar in 1905. He was drowned on a surveying expedition in British Columbia in 1910.",
"William H. White (maritime writer)\nA Press of Canvas (2000) ; A Fine Tops'l Breeze (2001) ; The Evening Gun (2003) In Pursuit of Glory ; The Greater the Honor When Fortune Frowns (2009) 1812 Trilogy: The Isaac Biggs Series The Oliver Baldwin Series Other Books",
"Andrew Farkas\n Andrew Farkas is the author of a novel, The Big Red Herring (KERNPUNKT Press 2019), and two collections of short fiction, Sunsphere (BlazeVOX [books] 2019) and Self-Titled Debut (Subito Press 2009).",
"Saint (novel)\n Saint is a 2006 mystery novel written by Ted Dekker. It is the second in the series of the 'Project Showdown' Books which are also called 'The Paradise Novels'.",
"Lynn Coady\nStrange Heaven (1998) ; Saints of Big Harbour (2002) ; Mean Boy (2006) ; The Antagonist (2011) ; Watching You Without Me (2019) ",
"Bob Hallett\n Robert \"Bob\" Hallett (born 1966) is a Canadian musician, author, producer, and entrepreneur, best known as a founding member of the Canadian folk rock band Great Big Sea (1993–2013). He is also a native of St. John's, Newfoundland, Hallett co-founded Great Big Sea in 1993, with Alan Doyle, Sean McCann, and Darrell Power. The band sold over a million and half records around the world, over a twenty-year period. Through his company, Kilbride Music, Hallett has managed bands and produced records, radio specials, and live concerts. Hallet is a vocal proponent of talent development within the Newfoundland and East Coast Music Industries, and has authored ",
"Bill Roorbach\n Bill Roorbach (born August 8, 1953 Chicago, Illinois) is an American novelist, short story and nature writer, memoirist, journalist, blogger and critic. Roorbach has authored fiction and nonfiction works including Big Bend, which won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction and the O. Henry Prize. Roorbach's memoir in nature, Temple Stream, won the Maine Literary Award for Nonfiction, 2005. His novel, Life Among Giants, won the 2013 Maine Literary Award for Fiction.[18] And The Remedy for Love, also a novel, was one of six finalists for the 2014 Kirkus Fiction Prize.. His latest book, The Girl of the Lake, is a short story collection published in June 2017. His novel in progress is Lucky Turtle.",
"Saints (novel)\n Saints (1984) is a historical fiction novel by Orson Scott Card. It tells the story of the fictional protagonist, Dinah Kirkham, a native of Manchester, England, who immigrates to the United States and becomes one of the plural wives of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Saints was originally published as Woman Of Destiny, contrary to Card's wishes.",
"Jerry Dennis\n on the faculty of the University of Michigan's Bear River Writers Conference, where he teaches creative non-fiction and nature writing. As of 2014, he is the author of ten books. In 2015 his best known book is The Living Great Lakes, about his trip around the great lakes in a rickety ship. This book appeared on the Michigan Bestseller Book List for October, 2014. In 2014, in response to a pricing dispute between his publisher, MacMillan Press, and Amazon, Dennis set up his own publishing house, Big Maple Press, to produce books which will be sold only through independent booksellers.",
"Paul Eldridge\n the University of Florence in 1923. He later was an instructor of English literature at Saint John's College in Philadelphia, from 1910-1912, and was a member of the Authors' and Dramatists' League of the Authors' Guild of America. He is best known for collaborating with the American decadent novelist and poet George Sylvester Viereck, who was imprisoned as a Nazi agent in the 1940s, on a trilogy of exotic fantasy novels from 1928 to 1932, My First Two Thousand Years: the Autobiography of the Wandering Jew, Salome: the Wandering Jewess and the Invincible Adam. A highly prolific author, many of his later books were published by E. Haldeman-Julius in his \"Big Blue Books\" series. He died at the age of 94 in a New York City nursing home on July 26, 1982.",
"Saint (book)\n Saint: Why I Should Be Canonized Right Away is a book written by American Catholic radio host Lino Rulli. It was released on September 3, 2013 and is the sequel to Rulli's 2011 book, Sinner."
] |
Who is the author of Endpeace? | [
"Jon Cleary",
"Jon Stephen Cleary"
] | author | Endpeace | 4,037,342 | 49 | [
{
"id": "29894953",
"title": "Jeff Goldberg (writer)",
"text": " Jeff Goldberg is an American writer, who has published on the cultural history of psychoactive drugs, and how they work in the brain. He is the author of Flowers in the Blood, a history of opium, and Anatomy of a Scientific Discovery, an account of the race to discover endorphins, the body's own morphine. He has also written numerous articles about science and medicine, for Life, Discover, Omni and other magazines internationally.",
"score": "1.4479055"
},
{
"id": "26377599",
"title": "Physician writer",
"text": " and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and The New Yorker medical writer ; Tess Gerritsen, novelist ; Paul Kalanithi, neurosurgeon and author of When Breath Becomes Air ; Perri Klass, journalist, pediatrician, New York University professor ; Vincent Lam, Canadian writer (Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures) ; Asael Lubotzky, Israeli pediatrician, writer, and scientist ; C. J. Lyons, former pediatrician and thriller writer ; Amit Majmudar, poet, novelist, practicing radiologist, 1st Ohio poet laureate ; William James Maloney, American dentist, author ; Howard Markel, physician, medical historian, journalist, editor, national best selling author, and professor at The University of Michigan ; Siddhartha Mukherjee, oncologist, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of ",
"score": "1.3618374"
},
{
"id": "25444476",
"title": "Jerry Avorn",
"text": " Avorn is the author of the 2004 book \"Powerful Medicines\".",
"score": "1.3570454"
},
{
"id": "15411098",
"title": "Gian Luigi Gessa",
"text": "Endorphines(1987),Pythagora Press. ; Psychopharmachology(1990),Collana manuali di medicina,Masson. ; Dopamine and Mental Depression (1990),Paperback. ; Dysthymia: Diagnosis and Treatment (1998),Mediserve. ; Interview on neuroscience (2003),CUEC. ; Cocaine (2008),Rubbettino. ",
"score": "1.3552155"
},
{
"id": "14256266",
"title": "Jonathan Ott",
"text": " Ott has written eight books, co-written five, and contributed to four others, and published many articles in the field of entheogens. He has collaborated with other researchers like Christian Rätsch, Jochen Gartz, and the late ethnomycologist R. Gordon Wasson. He translated Albert Hofmann's 1979 book LSD: My Problem Child (LSD: Mein Sorgenkind), and On Aztec Botanical Names by Blas Pablo Reko, into English. His articles have appeared in many publications, including The Entheogen Review, The Entheogen Law Reporter, the Journal of Cognitive Liberties, the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (AKA the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs), the MAPS Bulletin, Head, High Times, Curare, Eleusis, Integration, Lloydia, The Sacred Mushroom Seeker, and several Harvard Botanical Museum pamphlets. He is a co-editor of Eleusis: Journal of Psychoactive Plants & Compounds, along with Giorgio Samorini.",
"score": "1.3491973"
},
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.3428848"
},
{
"id": "5980375",
"title": "Anita Endrezze",
"text": "Here First, Arnold Krupat, Brian Swann (Editors), Random House ",
"score": "1.3425112"
},
{
"id": "29159316",
"title": "Akira Endo (biochemist)",
"text": " Akira Endo (遠藤 章) is a Japanese biochemist whose research into the relationship between fungi and cholesterol biosynthesis led to the development of statin drugs, which are some of the best-selling pharmaceuticals in history. He received the Japan Prize in 2006, the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 2008, the Canada Gairdner International Award in 2017.",
"score": "1.3371918"
},
{
"id": "27277215",
"title": "Jean-Charles Schwartz",
"text": " of neuropeptides, Jean-Charles Schwartz created the concept of \"inactivation neuropeptidases\" by identifying the enzymes responsible for the metabolic inactivation of enkephalins and cholecystokininin and developed the first selective inhibitors of these enzymes, the latters used as research tools and then, from one of them thas therapeutic agent. He has clinically developed racecadotril (Tiorfan®), a neprilysin (\"enkephalinase\") inhibitor, the first selective intestinal anti-secretory agent that has been used as an antidiarrheal agent by several million patients. He also discovered by cloning several subtypes of brain serotonin receptors (5HT6, 5HT7), and established the neurotransmitter role of anandamide, an endogenous ligand of cannabinoid receptors. He is the author of more than 700 publications.",
"score": "1.3336192"
},
{
"id": "7614699",
"title": "Irving Kirsch",
"text": " Irving Kirsch (born March 7, 1943) is Associate Director of the Program in Placebo Studies and a lecturer in medicine at the Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He is also professor emeritus of psychology at the Universities of Hull and Plymouth in the United Kingdom, and the University of Connecticut in the United States. Kirsch is a leading researcher within the field of placebo studies who is noted for his work on placebo effects, antidepressants, expectancy, and hypnosis. He is the originator of response expectancy theory, and his analyses of clinical trials of antidepressants have influenced official treatment guidelines in the United Kingdom. He is the author of the 2009 book, The Emperor's New Drugs.",
"score": "1.3330729"
},
{
"id": "14018981",
"title": "Peter Lehmann (author)",
"text": " Peter Lehmann has an academic education in pedagogy. Since the 1970s, he has represented positions of humanistic anti-psychiatry within the consumer/survivor/ex-patient movement and circles of humanistic professionals. In 1986, he founded Peter Lehmann Publishing and Mail-order Bookstore in Berlin and published his first book, Der chemische Knebel (The Chemical Gag) (Berlin: Antipsychiatrieverlag 1986) in German through his own Antipsychiatric Publishing House. In 2003, he founded a branch in United Kingdom and in 2004 in the United States of America. In 1980, Peter Lehmann was co-founder of a support group of (ex-) users and survivors of psychiatry and advised about psychiatric drugs and withdrawal until 1989. In 1987, he was co-founder of PSYCHEX (Switzerland), an alliance of lawyers, doctors and survivors of psychiatry to support people who are incarcerated in psychiatric institutions); since then, board member. In 1989, he ",
"score": "1.3305414"
},
{
"id": "8402394",
"title": "Jerome Groopman",
"text": " The first book written by Groopman was The Measure of Our Days, published in 1997. He also published Second Opinions in 2000 and Anatomy of Hope in 2004. His 2007 book How Doctors Think rapidly rose to the top of the New York Times bestseller list when it was released. He further wrote, with his wife, Pamela Hartzband, an endocrinologist, the book Your Medical Mind (2011). Groopman was the guest editor for the 2008 edition of the yearly anthology The Best American Science and Nature Writing.",
"score": "1.3273408"
},
{
"id": "7589885",
"title": "Scott Waldman",
"text": " Together with Andre Terzic, in 2009 Waldman was co-editor of the multi-author textbook Pharmacology and Therapeutics: Principles to Practice, ISBN: 978-1-4160-3291-5, (Saunders-Elsevier)",
"score": "1.3263744"
},
{
"id": "25241550",
"title": "David E. Smith",
"text": " Smith is the founder and publisher of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, which has been published since 1967. Additionally, he is co-author of the textbook Clinician's Guide to Substance Abuse (ISBN: 978-0-07-134713-6) and co-author with Daniel Amen of the book Unchain Your Brain (ISBN: 978-1-886554-38-2), which provides practical tools for addiction patients and addiction professionals.",
"score": "1.3221803"
},
{
"id": "26960110",
"title": "Robert Whitaker (author)",
"text": " Whitaker was a medical writer at the Albany Times Union newspaper in Albany, New York from 1989 to 1994. In 1992, he was a Knight Science Journalism fellow at MIT. Following that, he became director of publications at Harvard Medical School. In 1994, he co-founded a publishing company, CenterWatch, that covered the pharmaceutical clinical trials industry. CenterWatch was acquired by Medical Economics, a division of The Thomson Corporation, in 1998. In 2002, USA Today published Whitaker's article \"Mind drugs may hinder recovery\" in its editorial/opinion section. In 2004, Whitaker published a paper in the non-peer-reviewed journal Medical Hypotheses, titled \"The case against antipsychotic drugs: a 50-year record of doing more harm than good\". In 2005, he published his paper Anatomy of an Epidemic: Psychiatric Drugs and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America in the peer-reviewed journal Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry. In his book Anatomy of an Epidemic, published in 2010, Whitaker continued his work.",
"score": "1.3206664"
},
{
"id": "11080602",
"title": "David Healy (psychiatrist)",
"text": " David Healy, a professor of psychiatry at Bangor University in the United Kingdom, is a psychiatrist, psychopharmacologist, scientist and author. His main areas of research are the contribution of antidepressants to suicide, conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and academic medicine, and the history of pharmacology. Healy has written more than 150 peer-reviewed articles, 200 other articles, and 20 books, including The Antidepressant Era, The Creation of Psychopharmacology, The Psychopharmacologists Volumes 1–3, Let Them Eat Prozac and Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder. Healy has been involved as an expert witness in homicide and suicide trials involving psychotropic drugs, and has brought concerns about some medications to the attention of drug regulators. He has also said that pharmaceutical companies sell drugs by marketing diseases and co-opting academic opinion-leaders. In his 2012 book Pharmageddon he argues that pharmaceutical companies have dominated healthcare in America, often with life-threatening results for patients. Healy is a founder and chief executive officer of Data Based Medicine Limited, which aims to make medicines safer through \"online direct patient reporting of drug effects\".",
"score": "1.3200231"
},
{
"id": "10275843",
"title": "David Taylor (professor)",
"text": " Taylor was the originator of the idea of an evidenced-based mental health prescribing guideline along with the late professor Robert Kerwin and has made a major and unique contribution by writing the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines for 25 years. Taylor is the de facto editor of this publication and is the only author to be credited on all 14 editions. The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines have sold over 300,000 copies in thirteen languages. The 14th edition was published in June 2021. He has also co-written three other books in the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines series.",
"score": "1.3183262"
},
{
"id": "6519375",
"title": "Gary Wand",
"text": " Gary S. Wand is an American physician and an Alfredo Rivière and Norma Rodriguez de Rivière professor who specializes in endocrinology and metabolism. He is the Johns Hopkins University director and a recipient of the National Institutes of Health Merit Award. He is a member of both Endocrine and Pituitary Societies and also of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. In 2008 he wrote a research paper called The influence of stress on the transition from drug use to addiction which was published by the National Institutes of Health in one of their magazines. A year later he collaborated with M Uhart to an article called Stress, alcohol and drug interaction: An update of human research which was published by the Addiction Biology journal.",
"score": "1.3154793"
},
{
"id": "6879769",
"title": "Michael Pollan",
"text": " Pollan is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a former executive editor for Harper's Magazine. His first book, Second Nature: A Gardener's Education, was published in 1991. Pollan has contributed to Greater Good, a social psychology magazine published by the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley. His article \"Edible Ethics\" discusses the intersection of ethical eating and social psychology. In his 1998 book A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder, Pollan methodically traced the design and construction of the out-building where he writes. The 2008 re-release of this book was re-titled A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams. Pollan wrote and narrated an audiobook, Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World, for Audible.com In 2014, Pollan wrote ",
"score": "1.3143796"
},
{
"id": "4759530",
"title": "Stephen Stahl",
"text": " Stahl is author of over 500 articles and book chapters and more than 1600 scientific presentations and abstracts. He has written 35 text books and edited 12 others, including the best-selling and award-winning Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology, now in its fourth edition and Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide, now in its seventh edition. In 2015, he published the thriller novel Shell Shock. Stahl’s interests are dedicated to producing and disseminating educational information about diseases and their treatments in psychiatry and neurology, with a special emphasis on multimedia, the internet. Stahl had a major input related to revelations about inadequate mental health care in the US Army and at Fort Hood His role was to train caregivers of wounded soldiers and ensure that the current system was appropriate.",
"score": "1.3120925"
}
] | [
"Jeff Goldberg (writer)\n Jeff Goldberg is an American writer, who has published on the cultural history of psychoactive drugs, and how they work in the brain. He is the author of Flowers in the Blood, a history of opium, and Anatomy of a Scientific Discovery, an account of the race to discover endorphins, the body's own morphine. He has also written numerous articles about science and medicine, for Life, Discover, Omni and other magazines internationally.",
"Physician writer\n and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and The New Yorker medical writer ; Tess Gerritsen, novelist ; Paul Kalanithi, neurosurgeon and author of When Breath Becomes Air ; Perri Klass, journalist, pediatrician, New York University professor ; Vincent Lam, Canadian writer (Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures) ; Asael Lubotzky, Israeli pediatrician, writer, and scientist ; C. J. Lyons, former pediatrician and thriller writer ; Amit Majmudar, poet, novelist, practicing radiologist, 1st Ohio poet laureate ; William James Maloney, American dentist, author ; Howard Markel, physician, medical historian, journalist, editor, national best selling author, and professor at The University of Michigan ; Siddhartha Mukherjee, oncologist, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of ",
"Jerry Avorn\n Avorn is the author of the 2004 book \"Powerful Medicines\".",
"Gian Luigi Gessa\nEndorphines(1987),Pythagora Press. ; Psychopharmachology(1990),Collana manuali di medicina,Masson. ; Dopamine and Mental Depression (1990),Paperback. ; Dysthymia: Diagnosis and Treatment (1998),Mediserve. ; Interview on neuroscience (2003),CUEC. ; Cocaine (2008),Rubbettino. ",
"Jonathan Ott\n Ott has written eight books, co-written five, and contributed to four others, and published many articles in the field of entheogens. He has collaborated with other researchers like Christian Rätsch, Jochen Gartz, and the late ethnomycologist R. Gordon Wasson. He translated Albert Hofmann's 1979 book LSD: My Problem Child (LSD: Mein Sorgenkind), and On Aztec Botanical Names by Blas Pablo Reko, into English. His articles have appeared in many publications, including The Entheogen Review, The Entheogen Law Reporter, the Journal of Cognitive Liberties, the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (AKA the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs), the MAPS Bulletin, Head, High Times, Curare, Eleusis, Integration, Lloydia, The Sacred Mushroom Seeker, and several Harvard Botanical Museum pamphlets. He is a co-editor of Eleusis: Journal of Psychoactive Plants & Compounds, along with Giorgio Samorini.",
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Anita Endrezze\nHere First, Arnold Krupat, Brian Swann (Editors), Random House ",
"Akira Endo (biochemist)\n Akira Endo (遠藤 章) is a Japanese biochemist whose research into the relationship between fungi and cholesterol biosynthesis led to the development of statin drugs, which are some of the best-selling pharmaceuticals in history. He received the Japan Prize in 2006, the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 2008, the Canada Gairdner International Award in 2017.",
"Jean-Charles Schwartz\n of neuropeptides, Jean-Charles Schwartz created the concept of \"inactivation neuropeptidases\" by identifying the enzymes responsible for the metabolic inactivation of enkephalins and cholecystokininin and developed the first selective inhibitors of these enzymes, the latters used as research tools and then, from one of them thas therapeutic agent. He has clinically developed racecadotril (Tiorfan®), a neprilysin (\"enkephalinase\") inhibitor, the first selective intestinal anti-secretory agent that has been used as an antidiarrheal agent by several million patients. He also discovered by cloning several subtypes of brain serotonin receptors (5HT6, 5HT7), and established the neurotransmitter role of anandamide, an endogenous ligand of cannabinoid receptors. He is the author of more than 700 publications.",
"Irving Kirsch\n Irving Kirsch (born March 7, 1943) is Associate Director of the Program in Placebo Studies and a lecturer in medicine at the Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He is also professor emeritus of psychology at the Universities of Hull and Plymouth in the United Kingdom, and the University of Connecticut in the United States. Kirsch is a leading researcher within the field of placebo studies who is noted for his work on placebo effects, antidepressants, expectancy, and hypnosis. He is the originator of response expectancy theory, and his analyses of clinical trials of antidepressants have influenced official treatment guidelines in the United Kingdom. He is the author of the 2009 book, The Emperor's New Drugs.",
"Peter Lehmann (author)\n Peter Lehmann has an academic education in pedagogy. Since the 1970s, he has represented positions of humanistic anti-psychiatry within the consumer/survivor/ex-patient movement and circles of humanistic professionals. In 1986, he founded Peter Lehmann Publishing and Mail-order Bookstore in Berlin and published his first book, Der chemische Knebel (The Chemical Gag) (Berlin: Antipsychiatrieverlag 1986) in German through his own Antipsychiatric Publishing House. In 2003, he founded a branch in United Kingdom and in 2004 in the United States of America. In 1980, Peter Lehmann was co-founder of a support group of (ex-) users and survivors of psychiatry and advised about psychiatric drugs and withdrawal until 1989. In 1987, he was co-founder of PSYCHEX (Switzerland), an alliance of lawyers, doctors and survivors of psychiatry to support people who are incarcerated in psychiatric institutions); since then, board member. In 1989, he ",
"Jerome Groopman\n The first book written by Groopman was The Measure of Our Days, published in 1997. He also published Second Opinions in 2000 and Anatomy of Hope in 2004. His 2007 book How Doctors Think rapidly rose to the top of the New York Times bestseller list when it was released. He further wrote, with his wife, Pamela Hartzband, an endocrinologist, the book Your Medical Mind (2011). Groopman was the guest editor for the 2008 edition of the yearly anthology The Best American Science and Nature Writing.",
"Scott Waldman\n Together with Andre Terzic, in 2009 Waldman was co-editor of the multi-author textbook Pharmacology and Therapeutics: Principles to Practice, ISBN: 978-1-4160-3291-5, (Saunders-Elsevier)",
"David E. Smith\n Smith is the founder and publisher of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, which has been published since 1967. Additionally, he is co-author of the textbook Clinician's Guide to Substance Abuse (ISBN: 978-0-07-134713-6) and co-author with Daniel Amen of the book Unchain Your Brain (ISBN: 978-1-886554-38-2), which provides practical tools for addiction patients and addiction professionals.",
"Robert Whitaker (author)\n Whitaker was a medical writer at the Albany Times Union newspaper in Albany, New York from 1989 to 1994. In 1992, he was a Knight Science Journalism fellow at MIT. Following that, he became director of publications at Harvard Medical School. In 1994, he co-founded a publishing company, CenterWatch, that covered the pharmaceutical clinical trials industry. CenterWatch was acquired by Medical Economics, a division of The Thomson Corporation, in 1998. In 2002, USA Today published Whitaker's article \"Mind drugs may hinder recovery\" in its editorial/opinion section. In 2004, Whitaker published a paper in the non-peer-reviewed journal Medical Hypotheses, titled \"The case against antipsychotic drugs: a 50-year record of doing more harm than good\". In 2005, he published his paper Anatomy of an Epidemic: Psychiatric Drugs and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America in the peer-reviewed journal Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry. In his book Anatomy of an Epidemic, published in 2010, Whitaker continued his work.",
"David Healy (psychiatrist)\n David Healy, a professor of psychiatry at Bangor University in the United Kingdom, is a psychiatrist, psychopharmacologist, scientist and author. His main areas of research are the contribution of antidepressants to suicide, conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and academic medicine, and the history of pharmacology. Healy has written more than 150 peer-reviewed articles, 200 other articles, and 20 books, including The Antidepressant Era, The Creation of Psychopharmacology, The Psychopharmacologists Volumes 1–3, Let Them Eat Prozac and Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder. Healy has been involved as an expert witness in homicide and suicide trials involving psychotropic drugs, and has brought concerns about some medications to the attention of drug regulators. He has also said that pharmaceutical companies sell drugs by marketing diseases and co-opting academic opinion-leaders. In his 2012 book Pharmageddon he argues that pharmaceutical companies have dominated healthcare in America, often with life-threatening results for patients. Healy is a founder and chief executive officer of Data Based Medicine Limited, which aims to make medicines safer through \"online direct patient reporting of drug effects\".",
"David Taylor (professor)\n Taylor was the originator of the idea of an evidenced-based mental health prescribing guideline along with the late professor Robert Kerwin and has made a major and unique contribution by writing the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines for 25 years. Taylor is the de facto editor of this publication and is the only author to be credited on all 14 editions. The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines have sold over 300,000 copies in thirteen languages. The 14th edition was published in June 2021. He has also co-written three other books in the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines series.",
"Gary Wand\n Gary S. Wand is an American physician and an Alfredo Rivière and Norma Rodriguez de Rivière professor who specializes in endocrinology and metabolism. He is the Johns Hopkins University director and a recipient of the National Institutes of Health Merit Award. He is a member of both Endocrine and Pituitary Societies and also of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. In 2008 he wrote a research paper called The influence of stress on the transition from drug use to addiction which was published by the National Institutes of Health in one of their magazines. A year later he collaborated with M Uhart to an article called Stress, alcohol and drug interaction: An update of human research which was published by the Addiction Biology journal.",
"Michael Pollan\n Pollan is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a former executive editor for Harper's Magazine. His first book, Second Nature: A Gardener's Education, was published in 1991. Pollan has contributed to Greater Good, a social psychology magazine published by the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley. His article \"Edible Ethics\" discusses the intersection of ethical eating and social psychology. In his 1998 book A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder, Pollan methodically traced the design and construction of the out-building where he writes. The 2008 re-release of this book was re-titled A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams. Pollan wrote and narrated an audiobook, Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World, for Audible.com In 2014, Pollan wrote ",
"Stephen Stahl\n Stahl is author of over 500 articles and book chapters and more than 1600 scientific presentations and abstracts. He has written 35 text books and edited 12 others, including the best-selling and award-winning Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology, now in its fourth edition and Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide, now in its seventh edition. In 2015, he published the thriller novel Shell Shock. Stahl’s interests are dedicated to producing and disseminating educational information about diseases and their treatments in psychiatry and neurology, with a special emphasis on multimedia, the internet. Stahl had a major input related to revelations about inadequate mental health care in the US Army and at Fort Hood His role was to train caregivers of wounded soldiers and ensure that the current system was appropriate."
] |
Who is the author of Turning On? | [
"Damon Knight",
"Damon Francis Knight",
"Stuart Fleming",
"Conanight"
] | author | Turning On | 6,046,335 | 69 | [
{
"id": "12762830",
"title": "Turning On",
"text": " Turning On is a collection of thirteen science fiction short stories by American writer Damon Knight. The stories were originally published between 1951 and 1965 in Galaxy, Analog and other science fiction magazines. An Ace paperback reprinting in 1967 omitted the story \"The Handler\". This story was also omitted in the 1966 reissue of the Doubleday hardback edition.",
"score": "1.6601295"
},
{
"id": "15533731",
"title": "Turning on the Girls",
"text": " Turning on the Girls is a 2001 American comedic dystopian science fiction novel written by Cheryl Benard.",
"score": "1.5771"
},
{
"id": "26434754",
"title": "Steve Perry (author)",
"text": "1) Turnabout (2008) ",
"score": "1.5714805"
},
{
"id": "5032565",
"title": "The Turning (play)",
"text": " The Turning is a play written by Bill McCluskey, based on The Turning, a publication of connected short stories by Australian writer Tim Winton. It spans from 1970–2001 in Western Australia, covering much of the life of protagonist Vic Lang.",
"score": "1.5059972"
},
{
"id": "1383825",
"title": "Lee Thomas (reporter)",
"text": " His book \"Turning White\" was taken from his personal journals and experiences from his disease. Lee had various television appearances to discuss his book, Turning White. He appeared on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos, Larry King Live, and 20/20.",
"score": "1.4805136"
},
{
"id": "30299270",
"title": "Patrick Califia",
"text": " arguments, but from his erotic fiction: \"they read Califia-Rice's S/M fantasies, got turned on and got over it.\" In 1979, as a student in psychology at San Francisco State University, his research was published in the Journal of Homosexuality. Califia co-founded Samois, a lesbian-feminist BDSM organization based in San Francisco that existed from 1978 to 1983, and shifted his focus to the lesbian experience of BDSM. The Samois Collective produced, with Califia's contributions, the book Coming to Power, published by Alyson Publications. Coming To Power, according to Heather Findlay, editor-in-chief of lesbian magazine Girlfriends, was \"one of the most transformative lesbian books, [foretelling] the end ",
"score": "1.4718957"
},
{
"id": "6242656",
"title": "The Turning (short story collection)",
"text": " The Turning is a collection of short stories by Australian author Tim Winton published in April 2005.",
"score": "1.4568244"
},
{
"id": "4568534",
"title": "Kate Devlin",
"text": " they be supplied to the elderly in residential care facilities for companionship and sex. Devlin was named one of London's most influential people of 2017 by the Progress 1000, London Evening Standard. In 2018 Devlin released her book, Turned On: Science, Sex and Robots. The book began as research into the technological development of sex robots and explores the relationship between technology and intimacy. Engineering & Technology (E&T) magazine described the book as \"a creative, optimistic, open-minded exploration of sex robots\", particularly in its discussion on current sex technology. The Times described it as \"illuminating, witty and written with a wide open mind\".",
"score": "1.4508798"
},
{
"id": "12957593",
"title": "Ron Terpening",
"text": " California. The Turning, a coming-of-age tale, tells the story of Artie Crenshaw, a teenager with an abusive father. At his job one night, Artie decides to postpone going home, and the events that follow as a result of this decision cause him more trouble but ultimately help spur his progression towards manhood. Karen Hoth, writing in the School Library Journal, praised the “well-written story,” proclaiming the characters “well developed” and the book itself “touching.” The book was selected for inclusion on The New York Public Library’s 2002 Books For The Teen Age List, the “best of the previous year’s publishing for teenagers,” by the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association for their Top Forty Young-Adult Novels for 2001, and by Appleton North High School (Appleton, Wisconsin) for their Top 25 Recommended Reading (2002).",
"score": "1.415215"
},
{
"id": "4070672",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " remaining material appeared in this companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out, and contained Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text. ; Change Your Brain. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001) ; Politics of Self-Determination. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510159. ; The Politics of Psychopharmacology. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510566. ; Musings on Human Metamorphoses (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2002). ISBN: 1579510582. ; Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. ",
"score": "1.3977203"
},
{
"id": "1183162",
"title": "The Cat Who Turned On and Off",
"text": " The Cat Who Turned On and Off is the third novel in a series of murder mystery novels by Lilian Jackson Braun.",
"score": "1.3941274"
},
{
"id": "4070671",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " contains chapters 1 to 11 of the original. The remaining material appears in a companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out containing Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text.\" ; The Delicious Grace of Moving One's Hand: The Collected Sex Writings. Thunder's Mouth Press (1999). ISBN: 1560251816. ; Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out. Ronin Publishing (1999). ISBN: 1579510094. ; The original edition of The Politics of Ecstasy was divided into two books by Ronin Publishing. The first abbreviated edition carried the original title of Politics of Ecstasy and contained chapters 1 to 11 of the original. ",
"score": "1.3918467"
},
{
"id": "1824526",
"title": "David Belbin",
"text": " and the Nottingham novel. In 2004, Belbin organised Turning Point, the UK's first national conference on Young Adult Fiction. It featured many significant Young Adult Fiction authors, including Kevin Brooks, Melvyn Burgess, Anne Cassidy, Keith Gray, Graham Marks, Nicola Morgan, Beverley Naidoo and Bali Rai. In 2012, he became a trustee of Nottingham Playhouse. He chairs the company that successfully bid for Nottingham to become a Unesco City of Literature, the city receiving the award in December, 2015. In 2011, Belbin began publishing a series of Nottingham-based novels about crime and politics, Bone And Cane, which follows a New Labour MP, Sarah Bone, and her ex-lover, convicted cannabis producer, Nick Cane, from ",
"score": "1.3916774"
},
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.390219"
},
{
"id": "11796324",
"title": "Turn On to Love",
"text": " Turn On to Love is a 1969 film directed by John G. Avildsen and starring Sharon Kent, Richard Michaels, and Luigi Mastroianni. The film marks Avildsen's directorial debut.",
"score": "1.3836641"
},
{
"id": "14104575",
"title": "Turn-On",
"text": " Turn-On is an American sketch comedy series that aired on ABC in February 1969. Only one episode was shown, leaving one episode unaired, and the show is considered one of the most infamous flops in TV history. Turn-On's sole broadcast episode was shown on Wednesday, February 5, 1969, at 8:30 pm ET. Among the cast were Teresa Graves (who would join the Laugh-In cast that fall), Hamilton Camp, and Chuck McCann. The writing staff included Albert Brooks. The guest host for the first episode was Tim Conway, who also participated in certain sketches.",
"score": "1.3784114"
},
{
"id": "578245",
"title": "Jaclyn Friedman",
"text": " the teacher young women need.” In 2017, Friedman published “Unscrewed: Women, Sex, Power, and How to Stop Letting the System Screw Us All” Kirkus called Unscrewed “a potent, convincing manifesto” and the text “lively, emboldening and nonjudgmental.” In 2020, Friedman and co-editor Jessica Valenti published a second anthology, Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World. Believe Me includes essays by Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, Tatiana Maslany, Samantha Irby, Dahlia Lithwick, Loretta Ross, Jamil Smith, Julia Serano, and more. Publishers Weekly wrote “Consistently well-written and soundly reasoned, these essays persuasively cast the tendency to doubt women as one of America’s greatest social ills. This illuminating call to action deserves a wide readership.” Friedman's writings have been published widely, including in The New York Times, Glamour The Guardian, The American Prospect, The Washington Post, The Nation and Salon.",
"score": "1.3779706"
},
{
"id": "31666317",
"title": "Rosebud Ben-Oni",
"text": "If This is the Age We End Discovery. Alice James Books, 2021. ISBN: 9781948579155 ; turn around, BRXGHT XYXS. Get Fresh LLC, 2019. ISBN: 9780998935898 ; Solecism: poems. Virtual Artists Collective, 2013. ISBN: 9780944048504, ",
"score": "1.3741765"
},
{
"id": "4070667",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " Ecstasy in 1990 and the final eleven chapters as Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out in 1999. ; High Priest (1968). ISBN: 0914171801. ; Jail Notes (1970). Preface by Allen Ginsberg. Douglas Book Corp. ; Confessions of a Hope Fiend. New York: Bantam Books (1973). ISBN: 978-0552680707.. ; Neurologic (with Joanna Leary) (1973) ; StarSeed (1973) ; Mystery, Magic & Miracle: Religion in a Post-Aquarian Age (with Edward F. Heenan and Jack Fritscher. Prentice-Hall (1973). ISBN: 013609032X. ; What Does WoMan Want?: Adventures Along the Schwarzchild Radius (1976) ; His only novel, revised and reprinted in 1987 by New Falcon ",
"score": "1.3738346"
},
{
"id": "8607183",
"title": "Turning Up and Turning On",
"text": " Turning Up and Turning On is a country album by Billy \"Crash\" Craddock. It was released in 1978 on the Capitol label.",
"score": "1.3714411"
}
] | [
"Turning On\n Turning On is a collection of thirteen science fiction short stories by American writer Damon Knight. The stories were originally published between 1951 and 1965 in Galaxy, Analog and other science fiction magazines. An Ace paperback reprinting in 1967 omitted the story \"The Handler\". This story was also omitted in the 1966 reissue of the Doubleday hardback edition.",
"Turning on the Girls\n Turning on the Girls is a 2001 American comedic dystopian science fiction novel written by Cheryl Benard.",
"Steve Perry (author)\n1) Turnabout (2008) ",
"The Turning (play)\n The Turning is a play written by Bill McCluskey, based on The Turning, a publication of connected short stories by Australian writer Tim Winton. It spans from 1970–2001 in Western Australia, covering much of the life of protagonist Vic Lang.",
"Lee Thomas (reporter)\n His book \"Turning White\" was taken from his personal journals and experiences from his disease. Lee had various television appearances to discuss his book, Turning White. He appeared on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos, Larry King Live, and 20/20.",
"Patrick Califia\n arguments, but from his erotic fiction: \"they read Califia-Rice's S/M fantasies, got turned on and got over it.\" In 1979, as a student in psychology at San Francisco State University, his research was published in the Journal of Homosexuality. Califia co-founded Samois, a lesbian-feminist BDSM organization based in San Francisco that existed from 1978 to 1983, and shifted his focus to the lesbian experience of BDSM. The Samois Collective produced, with Califia's contributions, the book Coming to Power, published by Alyson Publications. Coming To Power, according to Heather Findlay, editor-in-chief of lesbian magazine Girlfriends, was \"one of the most transformative lesbian books, [foretelling] the end ",
"The Turning (short story collection)\n The Turning is a collection of short stories by Australian author Tim Winton published in April 2005.",
"Kate Devlin\n they be supplied to the elderly in residential care facilities for companionship and sex. Devlin was named one of London's most influential people of 2017 by the Progress 1000, London Evening Standard. In 2018 Devlin released her book, Turned On: Science, Sex and Robots. The book began as research into the technological development of sex robots and explores the relationship between technology and intimacy. Engineering & Technology (E&T) magazine described the book as \"a creative, optimistic, open-minded exploration of sex robots\", particularly in its discussion on current sex technology. The Times described it as \"illuminating, witty and written with a wide open mind\".",
"Ron Terpening\n California. The Turning, a coming-of-age tale, tells the story of Artie Crenshaw, a teenager with an abusive father. At his job one night, Artie decides to postpone going home, and the events that follow as a result of this decision cause him more trouble but ultimately help spur his progression towards manhood. Karen Hoth, writing in the School Library Journal, praised the “well-written story,” proclaiming the characters “well developed” and the book itself “touching.” The book was selected for inclusion on The New York Public Library’s 2002 Books For The Teen Age List, the “best of the previous year’s publishing for teenagers,” by the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association for their Top Forty Young-Adult Novels for 2001, and by Appleton North High School (Appleton, Wisconsin) for their Top 25 Recommended Reading (2002).",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n remaining material appeared in this companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out, and contained Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text. ; Change Your Brain. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001) ; Politics of Self-Determination. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510159. ; The Politics of Psychopharmacology. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510566. ; Musings on Human Metamorphoses (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2002). ISBN: 1579510582. ; Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. ",
"The Cat Who Turned On and Off\n The Cat Who Turned On and Off is the third novel in a series of murder mystery novels by Lilian Jackson Braun.",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n contains chapters 1 to 11 of the original. The remaining material appears in a companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out containing Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text.\" ; The Delicious Grace of Moving One's Hand: The Collected Sex Writings. Thunder's Mouth Press (1999). ISBN: 1560251816. ; Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out. Ronin Publishing (1999). ISBN: 1579510094. ; The original edition of The Politics of Ecstasy was divided into two books by Ronin Publishing. The first abbreviated edition carried the original title of Politics of Ecstasy and contained chapters 1 to 11 of the original. ",
"David Belbin\n and the Nottingham novel. In 2004, Belbin organised Turning Point, the UK's first national conference on Young Adult Fiction. It featured many significant Young Adult Fiction authors, including Kevin Brooks, Melvyn Burgess, Anne Cassidy, Keith Gray, Graham Marks, Nicola Morgan, Beverley Naidoo and Bali Rai. In 2012, he became a trustee of Nottingham Playhouse. He chairs the company that successfully bid for Nottingham to become a Unesco City of Literature, the city receiving the award in December, 2015. In 2011, Belbin began publishing a series of Nottingham-based novels about crime and politics, Bone And Cane, which follows a New Labour MP, Sarah Bone, and her ex-lover, convicted cannabis producer, Nick Cane, from ",
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Turn On to Love\n Turn On to Love is a 1969 film directed by John G. Avildsen and starring Sharon Kent, Richard Michaels, and Luigi Mastroianni. The film marks Avildsen's directorial debut.",
"Turn-On\n Turn-On is an American sketch comedy series that aired on ABC in February 1969. Only one episode was shown, leaving one episode unaired, and the show is considered one of the most infamous flops in TV history. Turn-On's sole broadcast episode was shown on Wednesday, February 5, 1969, at 8:30 pm ET. Among the cast were Teresa Graves (who would join the Laugh-In cast that fall), Hamilton Camp, and Chuck McCann. The writing staff included Albert Brooks. The guest host for the first episode was Tim Conway, who also participated in certain sketches.",
"Jaclyn Friedman\n the teacher young women need.” In 2017, Friedman published “Unscrewed: Women, Sex, Power, and How to Stop Letting the System Screw Us All” Kirkus called Unscrewed “a potent, convincing manifesto” and the text “lively, emboldening and nonjudgmental.” In 2020, Friedman and co-editor Jessica Valenti published a second anthology, Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World. Believe Me includes essays by Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, Tatiana Maslany, Samantha Irby, Dahlia Lithwick, Loretta Ross, Jamil Smith, Julia Serano, and more. Publishers Weekly wrote “Consistently well-written and soundly reasoned, these essays persuasively cast the tendency to doubt women as one of America’s greatest social ills. This illuminating call to action deserves a wide readership.” Friedman's writings have been published widely, including in The New York Times, Glamour The Guardian, The American Prospect, The Washington Post, The Nation and Salon.",
"Rosebud Ben-Oni\nIf This is the Age We End Discovery. Alice James Books, 2021. ISBN: 9781948579155 ; turn around, BRXGHT XYXS. Get Fresh LLC, 2019. ISBN: 9780998935898 ; Solecism: poems. Virtual Artists Collective, 2013. ISBN: 9780944048504, ",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n Ecstasy in 1990 and the final eleven chapters as Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out in 1999. ; High Priest (1968). ISBN: 0914171801. ; Jail Notes (1970). Preface by Allen Ginsberg. Douglas Book Corp. ; Confessions of a Hope Fiend. New York: Bantam Books (1973). ISBN: 978-0552680707.. ; Neurologic (with Joanna Leary) (1973) ; StarSeed (1973) ; Mystery, Magic & Miracle: Religion in a Post-Aquarian Age (with Edward F. Heenan and Jack Fritscher. Prentice-Hall (1973). ISBN: 013609032X. ; What Does WoMan Want?: Adventures Along the Schwarzchild Radius (1976) ; His only novel, revised and reprinted in 1987 by New Falcon ",
"Turning Up and Turning On\n Turning Up and Turning On is a country album by Billy \"Crash\" Craddock. It was released in 1978 on the Capitol label."
] |
Who is the author of Something More? | [
"Paul Cornell",
"Paul Douglas Cornell"
] | author | Something More (novel) | 5,787,033 | 58 | [
{
"id": "24993174",
"title": "Something More (novel)",
"text": " Something More is a science fantasy novel by Paul Cornell, first published by Gollancz in 2001. It was Cornell's first (non-tie-in) novel to be published. The novel is set in a future Britain circa 2248, and the plot centres on the investigation of a mysterious stately home called Heartsease.",
"score": "1.70326"
},
{
"id": "4986309",
"title": "Ian Tregillis",
"text": "Something More Than Night (2013, Tor Books, ISBN: 9780765334329) ",
"score": "1.5240989"
},
{
"id": "14772582",
"title": "Alex Trochut",
"text": " His monograph, More Is More, explores his working methodologies and influences and was published in 2011. More Is More was written by Dani Navarro.",
"score": "1.4470723"
},
{
"id": "1312251",
"title": "Something More (1999 film)",
"text": " Something More is a 1999 Canadian comedy film directed by Rob W. King. It stars Michael A. Goorjian, Chandra West, David Lovgren and Jennifer Beals. The film was written by Peter Bryant, and produced by Minds Eye Entertainment.",
"score": "1.4379904"
},
{
"id": "2632595",
"title": "More Than This (novel)",
"text": " More Than This is a young adult novel by Patrick Ness, published by Candlewick Press in 2013. It follows a teenage boy named Seth who, after drowning in the ocean, wakes up alone on a desolate suburban English street in what he believes to be hell.",
"score": "1.4148307"
},
{
"id": "28505037",
"title": "Somebody Somewhere (book)",
"text": " Somebody Somewhere is a book written by the autistic author, songwriter, screenwriter and artist Donna Williams. It is the 1994 sequel to the bestseller Nobody Nowhere, which spent 15 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller List. Somebody Somewhere takes up Williams' story after her diagnosis with autism at the age of 26 after a childhood often thought deaf, labelled psychotic, then disturbed. In this book, Williams becomes a teacher and goes on to work with children on the autistic spectrum before being thrust into the public eye upon the accidental publication of her first book. Somebody Somewhere is the second in her autobiographical collection of four books. Later autobiographical works include the third book in the series, Like Colour To The Blind (1998), and the fourth autobiographical installment, Everyday Heaven (2004).",
"score": "1.4068446"
},
{
"id": "889370",
"title": "Something More (Altars album)",
"text": " Something More is the second studio album from Altars. Facedown Records released the album on May 14, 2013. Altars worked with Seth Munson in the production of this album.",
"score": "1.3969121"
},
{
"id": "7624626",
"title": "John Ralston (musician)",
"text": "\"Something More\" by Matt Minchew (2011) ; \"The Sun Clouded Over\" by Keith Michaud (2008) ",
"score": "1.3948498"
},
{
"id": "29572822",
"title": "Something for Nothing (book)",
"text": " Something for Nothing is humorous story of the science fiction writer Robert Sheckley. It was first published in the journal Galaxy Science Fiction in 1954 and in the collection Citizen in Space in 1955.",
"score": "1.3887217"
},
{
"id": "26377589",
"title": "Physician writer",
"text": " (born 1942) author of 13 novels, often called the Medical thrillers series ; Miodrag Pavlović (1928–1914) Serbian writer and physician. ; M. Scott Peck (1936–2005), American psychiatrist whose The Road Less Traveled sold more than seven million copies and was on The New York Times best-seller list for over six years ; Walker Percy (1916–1990) American Southern author whose interests included philosophy and semiotics ; Lenrie Leopold Wilfred Peters (born 1932) Gambian novelist and poet ; Steve Pieczenik (born 1943) is author of psycho-political thrillers and the co-creator of the best-selling Tom Clancy's Op-Center and Tom Clancy's Net Force paperback series ; ",
"score": "1.376784"
},
{
"id": "27796113",
"title": "Chris Else",
"text": " Chris Else (born 1942) is the New Zealand author of novels, collections of short stories, and poems. ",
"score": "1.3743017"
},
{
"id": "14372688",
"title": "A Higher Call",
"text": " The book was written by Adam Makos and Larry Alexander and published in 2012 by Berkley Books. It has 400 pages, and includes photographs, notes and a bibliography.",
"score": "1.3670025"
},
{
"id": "30905865",
"title": "Something/Anything?",
"text": " Album Single",
"score": "1.365412"
},
{
"id": "2632601",
"title": "More Than This (novel)",
"text": " More Than This was reviewed favorably by critics and readers. Martin Chilton of The Daily Telegraph describes the novel as \"an impressively challenging and philosophical book for young adults,\" capturing \"ambiguity and bewilderment of being young and the uncertainty of what will happen to any of us next in life.\" Tony Bradman of The Guardian concurred, writing: \"Seth is a terrific exemplar of the eternal teenage desire for there to be, in the words of the novel's title, \"more than this\"\". As of early March 2015 the book scores 4.04 out of 5 stars on the social reading site Goodreads. John Green's review of More Than This is printed on the front cover of the book. Green comments, \"Just read it.\"",
"score": "1.351263"
},
{
"id": "25609205",
"title": "Something More Than Free",
"text": " Something More Than Free is the fifth studio album by Jason Isbell. It was produced by Dave Cobb, who also produced Isbell's previous record, Southeastern. The album received the Grammy Award for Best Americana Album at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards.",
"score": "1.3495623"
},
{
"id": "14377770",
"title": "Iñigo Moré",
"text": " the books supplement of the newspaper El Mundo Iñigo More's specialization led him to be the sole Spanish writer invited in 2012 to the 10th anniversary National Latino Writers Conference organized by the National Hispanic Cultural Centre in Albuquerque In his professional life, Moré is an expert in payment systems. He is the founder of the research centre Remesas that specializes in studying remittances. In this capacity he is member of the Payment systems Market Expert Group that advises the European Commission on its payments systems policy, and serves as a member of the Spanish Chapter of the Club of Rome and member of the Economic and Financial Control Commission of CEDRO, the non-profit association of authors and publishers that is in charge of protecting and managing in a collective manner their intellectual property rights. Moré is married and the father of two children.",
"score": "1.3446763"
},
{
"id": "25007118",
"title": "Less (novel)",
"text": " Less is a satirical comedy novel by American author Andrew Sean Greer first published in 2017. It follows writer Arthur Less while he travels the world on a literary tour to numb his loss of the man he loves. It won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.",
"score": "1.3416772"
},
{
"id": "6128997",
"title": "S. Andrew Swann",
"text": "Welcome to Moreytown (Choice of Games, 2017) He has also published an interactive novel. ",
"score": "1.3358834"
},
{
"id": "13468619",
"title": "The Writer Will Do Something",
"text": " The Writer Will Do Something is an interactive fiction video game written by Matthew S. Burns and Tom Bissell and created using Twine.",
"score": "1.332473"
},
{
"id": "10263173",
"title": "Helen Norris",
"text": " She began writing as a child and graduated from University of Alabama in 1938. Her first novel, Something More Than Earth, was published in 1940. The book, though launched with a party attended by Margaret Mitchell, was not a commercial success. Norris stopped writing after the birth of her children but began again in the 1950s with one novel unpublished until the 1980s and another, For the Glory of God, that was published in 1958. In 1966 she began teaching English at Huntington College in Montgomery, Alabama until her retirement in 1979. Following her retirement, Norris actively pursued her writing career ",
"score": "1.3315187"
}
] | [
"Something More (novel)\n Something More is a science fantasy novel by Paul Cornell, first published by Gollancz in 2001. It was Cornell's first (non-tie-in) novel to be published. The novel is set in a future Britain circa 2248, and the plot centres on the investigation of a mysterious stately home called Heartsease.",
"Ian Tregillis\nSomething More Than Night (2013, Tor Books, ISBN: 9780765334329) ",
"Alex Trochut\n His monograph, More Is More, explores his working methodologies and influences and was published in 2011. More Is More was written by Dani Navarro.",
"Something More (1999 film)\n Something More is a 1999 Canadian comedy film directed by Rob W. King. It stars Michael A. Goorjian, Chandra West, David Lovgren and Jennifer Beals. The film was written by Peter Bryant, and produced by Minds Eye Entertainment.",
"More Than This (novel)\n More Than This is a young adult novel by Patrick Ness, published by Candlewick Press in 2013. It follows a teenage boy named Seth who, after drowning in the ocean, wakes up alone on a desolate suburban English street in what he believes to be hell.",
"Somebody Somewhere (book)\n Somebody Somewhere is a book written by the autistic author, songwriter, screenwriter and artist Donna Williams. It is the 1994 sequel to the bestseller Nobody Nowhere, which spent 15 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller List. Somebody Somewhere takes up Williams' story after her diagnosis with autism at the age of 26 after a childhood often thought deaf, labelled psychotic, then disturbed. In this book, Williams becomes a teacher and goes on to work with children on the autistic spectrum before being thrust into the public eye upon the accidental publication of her first book. Somebody Somewhere is the second in her autobiographical collection of four books. Later autobiographical works include the third book in the series, Like Colour To The Blind (1998), and the fourth autobiographical installment, Everyday Heaven (2004).",
"Something More (Altars album)\n Something More is the second studio album from Altars. Facedown Records released the album on May 14, 2013. Altars worked with Seth Munson in the production of this album.",
"John Ralston (musician)\n\"Something More\" by Matt Minchew (2011) ; \"The Sun Clouded Over\" by Keith Michaud (2008) ",
"Something for Nothing (book)\n Something for Nothing is humorous story of the science fiction writer Robert Sheckley. It was first published in the journal Galaxy Science Fiction in 1954 and in the collection Citizen in Space in 1955.",
"Physician writer\n (born 1942) author of 13 novels, often called the Medical thrillers series ; Miodrag Pavlović (1928–1914) Serbian writer and physician. ; M. Scott Peck (1936–2005), American psychiatrist whose The Road Less Traveled sold more than seven million copies and was on The New York Times best-seller list for over six years ; Walker Percy (1916–1990) American Southern author whose interests included philosophy and semiotics ; Lenrie Leopold Wilfred Peters (born 1932) Gambian novelist and poet ; Steve Pieczenik (born 1943) is author of psycho-political thrillers and the co-creator of the best-selling Tom Clancy's Op-Center and Tom Clancy's Net Force paperback series ; ",
"Chris Else\n Chris Else (born 1942) is the New Zealand author of novels, collections of short stories, and poems. ",
"A Higher Call\n The book was written by Adam Makos and Larry Alexander and published in 2012 by Berkley Books. It has 400 pages, and includes photographs, notes and a bibliography.",
"Something/Anything?\n Album Single",
"More Than This (novel)\n More Than This was reviewed favorably by critics and readers. Martin Chilton of The Daily Telegraph describes the novel as \"an impressively challenging and philosophical book for young adults,\" capturing \"ambiguity and bewilderment of being young and the uncertainty of what will happen to any of us next in life.\" Tony Bradman of The Guardian concurred, writing: \"Seth is a terrific exemplar of the eternal teenage desire for there to be, in the words of the novel's title, \"more than this\"\". As of early March 2015 the book scores 4.04 out of 5 stars on the social reading site Goodreads. John Green's review of More Than This is printed on the front cover of the book. Green comments, \"Just read it.\"",
"Something More Than Free\n Something More Than Free is the fifth studio album by Jason Isbell. It was produced by Dave Cobb, who also produced Isbell's previous record, Southeastern. The album received the Grammy Award for Best Americana Album at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards.",
"Iñigo Moré\n the books supplement of the newspaper El Mundo Iñigo More's specialization led him to be the sole Spanish writer invited in 2012 to the 10th anniversary National Latino Writers Conference organized by the National Hispanic Cultural Centre in Albuquerque In his professional life, Moré is an expert in payment systems. He is the founder of the research centre Remesas that specializes in studying remittances. In this capacity he is member of the Payment systems Market Expert Group that advises the European Commission on its payments systems policy, and serves as a member of the Spanish Chapter of the Club of Rome and member of the Economic and Financial Control Commission of CEDRO, the non-profit association of authors and publishers that is in charge of protecting and managing in a collective manner their intellectual property rights. Moré is married and the father of two children.",
"Less (novel)\n Less is a satirical comedy novel by American author Andrew Sean Greer first published in 2017. It follows writer Arthur Less while he travels the world on a literary tour to numb his loss of the man he loves. It won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.",
"S. Andrew Swann\nWelcome to Moreytown (Choice of Games, 2017) He has also published an interactive novel. ",
"The Writer Will Do Something\n The Writer Will Do Something is an interactive fiction video game written by Matthew S. Burns and Tom Bissell and created using Twine.",
"Helen Norris\n She began writing as a child and graduated from University of Alabama in 1938. Her first novel, Something More Than Earth, was published in 1940. The book, though launched with a party attended by Margaret Mitchell, was not a commercial success. Norris stopped writing after the birth of her children but began again in the 1950s with one novel unpublished until the 1980s and another, For the Glory of God, that was published in 1958. In 1966 she began teaching English at Huntington College in Montgomery, Alabama until her retirement in 1979. Following her retirement, Norris actively pursued her writing career "
] |
Who is the author of The Romantic? | [
"Barbara Gowdy"
] | author | The Romantic (2003 novel) | 5,952,436 | 72 | [
{
"id": "28035292",
"title": "The Romantic (2003 novel)",
"text": " The Romantic (2003) is the sixth novel by Canadian novelist and short story writer Barbara Gowdy. It was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize in the same year",
"score": "1.5906577"
},
{
"id": "4977928",
"title": "The Romantics (novel)",
"text": " The Romantics (1999) is the debut novel of Pankaj Mishra, the author of Butter Chicken in Ludhiana: Travels in Small Town India (1995), An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the World (2004) and Temptations of the West: How to be Modern in India, Pakistan and Beyond (2006). The Romantics is an ironic tale of people longing for fulfillment in cultures other than their own. It was published in eleven European languages and won the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum award for first fiction.",
"score": "1.5080724"
},
{
"id": "9526470",
"title": "Romance (prose fiction)",
"text": " constraints of rationalism imposed by the Enlightenment, and associated classical aesthetic values, were also a significant influence. In addition to Walpole, Scott, and the Brontës other romance writers (as defined by Scott) include E. T. A. Hoffmann, Victor Hugo, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Thomas Hardy. In the twentieth century, examples are, Joseph Conrad, John Cowper Powys, and more recently, J. R. R. Tolkien and A. S. Byatt, whose best-selling novel Possession: A Romance won the Booker Prize in 1990. Though the modern literary romances has its beginnings in the eighteenth century, the genre has a long history that includes the ancient Greek novel and medieval romances.",
"score": "1.4974973"
},
{
"id": "32524754",
"title": "List of authors of erotic works",
"text": " ; Marilyn Jaye Lewis, author of Neptune and Surf and Lust: Bisexual Erotica ; Marco Vassi, author of \"The Erotic Comedies\", \"Devil's Sperm Is Cold\", and \"The Stoned Apocalypse\" ; Mario Vargas Llosa, author of The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto ; Mark Twain, author of 1601 ; the Marquis de Sade, author of Justine, or the Misfortunes of Virtue ; Maxim Jakubowski, editor of the Mammoth Erotica series and a major erotica writer in his own right ; M. Christian, author of ''The Bachelor Machine and other works ; Mitzi Szereto, author of The Wilde Passions of Dorian Gray, Pride and Prejudice: Hidden Lusts, and Phantom: The Immortal, among others. ; Nicolas Chorier – ",
"score": "1.485013"
},
{
"id": "11860425",
"title": "Mario Praz",
"text": " Mario Praz (September 6, 1896, Rome – March 23, 1982, Rome) was an Italian-born critic of art and literature, and a scholar of English literature. His best-known book, The Romantic Agony (1933), was a comprehensive survey of the decadent, erotic and morbid themes that characterised European authors of the late 18th and 19th centuries (see Femme fatale for a reference of one of his chapters). The book was written and published first in Italian as La carne, la morte e il diavolo nella letteratura romantica in 1930; and the most recent edition was published in Florence by Sansoni in 1996.",
"score": "1.4775968"
},
{
"id": "32570274",
"title": "Novel",
"text": " Hall, Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre and Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights. Publishing at the very end of the 19th century, Joseph Conrad has been called \"a supreme 'romancer.'\" In America \"the romance ... proved to be a serious, flexible, and successful medium for the exploration of philosophical ideas and attitudes.\" Notable examples include Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, and Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. A number of European novelists were similarly influenced during this period by the earlier romance tradition, along with the Romanticism, including Victor Hugo, with novels like The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831) and Les Misérables (1862), and Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov with A Hero of Our Time (1840). Many 19th-century authors dealt with ",
"score": "1.4681569"
},
{
"id": "14997549",
"title": "Romantic literature in English",
"text": " rejected rationalism and religious intellect. It appealed to those in opposition of Calvinism, which includes the belief that the destiny of each individual is preordained. Romantic Gothic literature made an early appearance with Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820) and Rip Van Winkle (1819); there are picturesque \"local color\" elements in Washington Irving's essays and especially his travel books. From 1823, the prolific and popular novelist James Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851) began publishing his historical romances of frontier and Indian life, to create a unique form of American literature. Cooper is best remembered for his numerous sea-stories and the historical novels known ",
"score": "1.454593"
},
{
"id": "9526501",
"title": "Romance (prose fiction)",
"text": " under three headings: \"novels of character and environment\", such as Tess of the D'Urbervilles; \"novels of ingenuity\", such as A Laodicean; \"romances and fantasies\", such as A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873); The Trumpet-Major (1880); Two on a Tower: A Romance (1882); A Group of Noble Dames (1891, a collection of short stories); The Well-Beloved: A Sketch of a Temperament (1897) (first published as a serial from 1892) Amongs twentieth century writers of romance are Joseph Conrad, Mary Webb, and John Cowper Powys. Joseph Conrad wrote Romance (1905), and The Rescue, A Romance of the Shallows (1920). Literary critic John Sutherland refers to Mary Webb as the pioneer of the genre of \"soil and gloom romance\". ",
"score": "1.4525992"
},
{
"id": "29483417",
"title": "Richard Marggraf Turley",
"text": " Coriolanus was widely reported. Their work also threw light on the significance of crop weeds such as darnel in King Lear. Marggraf Turley has written a number of books on the Romantic poets, including The Politics of Language in Romantic Literature (2002), Keats's Boyish Imagination (2004), Bright Stars: John Keats, Barry Cornwall and Romantic Literary Culture (2009), and Food and the Literary Imagination, co-authored with Archer and Thomas (2015), and he is editor of Keats's Places (2018). He is also author of a historical crime novel set in Romantic London of 1810, The Cunning House (2015). In 2013, he was one of the three English-panel judges for the Wales Book of the Year.",
"score": "1.4517357"
},
{
"id": "14997547",
"title": "Romantic literature in English",
"text": " as Scott's masterpieces. He was one of the most popular novelists of the era, and his historical romances inspired a generation of painters, composers, and writers throughout Europe, including Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn and J. M. W. Turner. His novels also inspired many operas, of which the most famous are Lucia di Lammermoor (1835) by Donizetti, and Bizet's La jolie fille de Perth, The Fair Maid of Perth (1867). However, today his contemporary, Jane Austen, is widely read and the source for films and television series, while Scott is neglected. He also inspired French authors such as Flaubert with Madame Bovary and Hugo in The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.",
"score": "1.4469261"
},
{
"id": "15113954",
"title": "Romance novel",
"text": " of a mass-market romance was Kathleen Woodiwiss' The Flame and the Flower (1972), published by Avon Books. This was the first single-title romance novel to be published as an original paperback in the US, though in the UK the romance genre was long established through the works of Georgette Heyer, and from the 1950s Catherine Cookson, as well as others. Nancy Coffey was the senior editor who negotiated a multi-book deal with Woodiwiss. The genre boomed in the 1980s, with the addition of many different categories of romance and an increased number of single-title romances, but popular authors started pushing the boundaries of both the genre and plot, as well as creating more contemporary characters.",
"score": "1.4432971"
},
{
"id": "8842145",
"title": "List of romantics",
"text": "Hildebrand / Nicolaas Beets (theologian, writer and poet) ; Willem Bilderdijk (poet) ; Jacob Geel (scholar, writer and critic) ; Multatuli / Eduard Douwes Dekker (writer) ; Mata Hari (courtesan) ",
"score": "1.4422207"
},
{
"id": "8842164",
"title": "List of romantics",
"text": "Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger (Danish poet, playwright) ; Uładzimir Karatkievič (Belarusian writer) ; Jónas Hallgrímsson (Icelandic poet, political activist) ; Raden Saleh (Indonesian painter) ; Taras Shevchenko (Ukrainian poet) ; Esaias Tegnér (Swedish writer) ; Egide Charles Gustave Wappers (Belgian painter) ; Anne Louise Germaine de Staël (Swiss writer) ; Miguel Barnet (Cuban writer, novelist and ethnographer) ",
"score": "1.4411974"
},
{
"id": "9526495",
"title": "Romance (prose fiction)",
"text": " that period include Sir Walter Scott, Alexandre Dumas, père, Jules Verne, Brontë Sisters, H. Rider Haggard, Victor Hugo, Emilio Salgari, Louis Henri Boussenard, Thomas Mayne Reid, Sax Rohmer, Edgar Wallace, and Robert Louis Stevenson. Rider Haggard (1856–1925), author of King Solomon's Mines (\"romantic adventure\"), She: A History of Adventure, was an English writer of adventure fiction set in exotic locations, predominantly Africa, and a pioneer of the lost world literary genre. He was \"part of the literary reaction against domestic realism that has been called a romance revival.\" Other writers following this trend were Robert Louis Stevenson, George MacDonald, and William Morris. Robert Louis Stevenson, wrote romances, including historical romances, in which adventure is often a prominent element (\"adventure, heroism, chivalry\", amongst other ",
"score": "1.4391243"
},
{
"id": "32524752",
"title": "List of authors of erotic works",
"text": "Alexander Pushkin, author of the Gabrieliad ; Alexander Trocchi ; Anaïs Nin, author of Delta of Venus ; Andreas Embirikos, author of The Great Eastern ; Anne Rice, also writing as A. N. Roquelaure ; Aran Ashe ; Barry N. Malzberg, author of Screen and writer/editor for Olympia Press ; Caitlín R. Kiernan — author of Frog Toes and Tentacles, Tales from the Woeful Platypus, and Sirenia Digest ; Catherine Robbe-Grillet, writing as Jean de Berg and Jeanne de Berg ; D. H. Lawrence, author of Lady Chatterley's Lover ; Daniel Defoe, author of Moll Flanders ; Elias Gaucher ; Emmanuelle Arsan, author of the novel Emmanuelle and various other works ; Georges Bataille, author ",
"score": "1.4386086"
},
{
"id": "16223120",
"title": "University of Cambridge",
"text": " his late epic Paradise Lost, the Restoration poet and playwright John Dryden, the pre-romantic Thomas Gray, best known his Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, whose joint work Lyrical Ballads is often seen to mark the beginning of the Romantic movement, later Romantics such as Lord Byron and the postromantic Alfred, Lord Tennyson, authors of the best known carpe diem poems including Robert Herrick best known \"To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time\" with the first line \"Gather ye rosebuds while ye may\" and Andrew Marvell who authored \"To His Coy Mistress\", classical scholar and lyric poet A. E. Housman, war poets Siegfried Sassoon and Rupert Brooke, ",
"score": "1.4365813"
},
{
"id": "13319469",
"title": "Romance (love)",
"text": "Loudin, Jo, The Hoax of Romance. New York: Prentice Hall, 1980. ; Young-Eisendrath, Polly, You're Not Who I Expected. William Morrow & Company, 1993. ; Kierkegaard, Søren. Stages on Life's Way. Transl. Walter Lowrie, D.D. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1940. ; Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Structural Anthropology. London: Allen Lane, 1968; New York: Penguin Books, 1994. Structural Anthropology. (volume 2) London: Allen Lane, 1977; New York: Peregrine Books 1976. ; Nietzsche, Friedrich. Human, All Too Human. Transl. R.J. Hollingdale. Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2nd Edition, 1996. ; Wiseman, Boris. Introducing Lévi-Strauss. New York: Totem Books, 1998. ; Denis de Rougemont, Love in the Western World. Pantheon Books, 1956. ; Francesco Alberoni, Falling in love, New York, Random House, 1983. ; Novak, Michael. Shaw, Elizabeth (editor) The Myth of Romantic Love and Other Essays Transaction Publishers (January 23, 2013). ",
"score": "1.4364388"
},
{
"id": "26212424",
"title": "The Romantic Manifesto",
"text": " The Romantic Manifesto: A Philosophy of Literature is a collection of essays regarding the nature of art by the philosopher Ayn Rand. It was first published in 1969, with a second, revised edition published in 1975. Most of the essays are reprinted from Rand's magazine The Objectivist.",
"score": "1.4356403"
},
{
"id": "28576781",
"title": "Historical romance",
"text": " to classify Cooper as a strict Romantic, Victor Hugo pronounced him greater than the great master of modern romance. This verdict was echoed by a multitude of less famous readers, such as Balzac and Rudolf Drescher of Germany, who were satisfied with no title for their favourite less than that of the \"American Scott.\" The modern mass-market romance genre was born in America 1972 with Avon's publication of Kathleen Woodiwiss's historical romance The Flame and the Flower. Set around 1900. it is the first romance novel \"to [follow] the principals into the bedroom.\" Aside from its content, the book was revolutionary in that it was one ",
"score": "1.4353117"
},
{
"id": "1844565",
"title": "Jeffrey N. Cox",
"text": "William Wordsworth, Second-Generation Romantic: Contesting Poetry after Waterloo. Forthcoming, Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN: 978-1108837613 ; Romanticism in the Shadow of War: Literary Culture in the Napoleonic War Years. Cambridge University Press, 2014. ISBN: 978-1107071940 ; Poetry and Politics in the Cockney School: Shelley, Keats, Hunt, and Their Circle. Cambridge University Press, 1998. Winner of the 2000 South Central Modern Language Association Best Book Award. Hardcover ISBN: 978-0521631006, Paperback ISBN: 978-0521604239 ; In the Shadows of Romance: Romantic Tragic Drama in Germany, England, and France. Ohio University Press, 1987. ISBN: 978-0821408582 ",
"score": "1.4348116"
}
] | [
"The Romantic (2003 novel)\n The Romantic (2003) is the sixth novel by Canadian novelist and short story writer Barbara Gowdy. It was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize in the same year",
"The Romantics (novel)\n The Romantics (1999) is the debut novel of Pankaj Mishra, the author of Butter Chicken in Ludhiana: Travels in Small Town India (1995), An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the World (2004) and Temptations of the West: How to be Modern in India, Pakistan and Beyond (2006). The Romantics is an ironic tale of people longing for fulfillment in cultures other than their own. It was published in eleven European languages and won the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum award for first fiction.",
"Romance (prose fiction)\n constraints of rationalism imposed by the Enlightenment, and associated classical aesthetic values, were also a significant influence. In addition to Walpole, Scott, and the Brontës other romance writers (as defined by Scott) include E. T. A. Hoffmann, Victor Hugo, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Thomas Hardy. In the twentieth century, examples are, Joseph Conrad, John Cowper Powys, and more recently, J. R. R. Tolkien and A. S. Byatt, whose best-selling novel Possession: A Romance won the Booker Prize in 1990. Though the modern literary romances has its beginnings in the eighteenth century, the genre has a long history that includes the ancient Greek novel and medieval romances.",
"List of authors of erotic works\n ; Marilyn Jaye Lewis, author of Neptune and Surf and Lust: Bisexual Erotica ; Marco Vassi, author of \"The Erotic Comedies\", \"Devil's Sperm Is Cold\", and \"The Stoned Apocalypse\" ; Mario Vargas Llosa, author of The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto ; Mark Twain, author of 1601 ; the Marquis de Sade, author of Justine, or the Misfortunes of Virtue ; Maxim Jakubowski, editor of the Mammoth Erotica series and a major erotica writer in his own right ; M. Christian, author of ''The Bachelor Machine and other works ; Mitzi Szereto, author of The Wilde Passions of Dorian Gray, Pride and Prejudice: Hidden Lusts, and Phantom: The Immortal, among others. ; Nicolas Chorier – ",
"Mario Praz\n Mario Praz (September 6, 1896, Rome – March 23, 1982, Rome) was an Italian-born critic of art and literature, and a scholar of English literature. His best-known book, The Romantic Agony (1933), was a comprehensive survey of the decadent, erotic and morbid themes that characterised European authors of the late 18th and 19th centuries (see Femme fatale for a reference of one of his chapters). The book was written and published first in Italian as La carne, la morte e il diavolo nella letteratura romantica in 1930; and the most recent edition was published in Florence by Sansoni in 1996.",
"Novel\n Hall, Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre and Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights. Publishing at the very end of the 19th century, Joseph Conrad has been called \"a supreme 'romancer.'\" In America \"the romance ... proved to be a serious, flexible, and successful medium for the exploration of philosophical ideas and attitudes.\" Notable examples include Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, and Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. A number of European novelists were similarly influenced during this period by the earlier romance tradition, along with the Romanticism, including Victor Hugo, with novels like The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831) and Les Misérables (1862), and Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov with A Hero of Our Time (1840). Many 19th-century authors dealt with ",
"Romantic literature in English\n rejected rationalism and religious intellect. It appealed to those in opposition of Calvinism, which includes the belief that the destiny of each individual is preordained. Romantic Gothic literature made an early appearance with Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820) and Rip Van Winkle (1819); there are picturesque \"local color\" elements in Washington Irving's essays and especially his travel books. From 1823, the prolific and popular novelist James Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851) began publishing his historical romances of frontier and Indian life, to create a unique form of American literature. Cooper is best remembered for his numerous sea-stories and the historical novels known ",
"Romance (prose fiction)\n under three headings: \"novels of character and environment\", such as Tess of the D'Urbervilles; \"novels of ingenuity\", such as A Laodicean; \"romances and fantasies\", such as A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873); The Trumpet-Major (1880); Two on a Tower: A Romance (1882); A Group of Noble Dames (1891, a collection of short stories); The Well-Beloved: A Sketch of a Temperament (1897) (first published as a serial from 1892) Amongs twentieth century writers of romance are Joseph Conrad, Mary Webb, and John Cowper Powys. Joseph Conrad wrote Romance (1905), and The Rescue, A Romance of the Shallows (1920). Literary critic John Sutherland refers to Mary Webb as the pioneer of the genre of \"soil and gloom romance\". ",
"Richard Marggraf Turley\n Coriolanus was widely reported. Their work also threw light on the significance of crop weeds such as darnel in King Lear. Marggraf Turley has written a number of books on the Romantic poets, including The Politics of Language in Romantic Literature (2002), Keats's Boyish Imagination (2004), Bright Stars: John Keats, Barry Cornwall and Romantic Literary Culture (2009), and Food and the Literary Imagination, co-authored with Archer and Thomas (2015), and he is editor of Keats's Places (2018). He is also author of a historical crime novel set in Romantic London of 1810, The Cunning House (2015). In 2013, he was one of the three English-panel judges for the Wales Book of the Year.",
"Romantic literature in English\n as Scott's masterpieces. He was one of the most popular novelists of the era, and his historical romances inspired a generation of painters, composers, and writers throughout Europe, including Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn and J. M. W. Turner. His novels also inspired many operas, of which the most famous are Lucia di Lammermoor (1835) by Donizetti, and Bizet's La jolie fille de Perth, The Fair Maid of Perth (1867). However, today his contemporary, Jane Austen, is widely read and the source for films and television series, while Scott is neglected. He also inspired French authors such as Flaubert with Madame Bovary and Hugo in The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.",
"Romance novel\n of a mass-market romance was Kathleen Woodiwiss' The Flame and the Flower (1972), published by Avon Books. This was the first single-title romance novel to be published as an original paperback in the US, though in the UK the romance genre was long established through the works of Georgette Heyer, and from the 1950s Catherine Cookson, as well as others. Nancy Coffey was the senior editor who negotiated a multi-book deal with Woodiwiss. The genre boomed in the 1980s, with the addition of many different categories of romance and an increased number of single-title romances, but popular authors started pushing the boundaries of both the genre and plot, as well as creating more contemporary characters.",
"List of romantics\nHildebrand / Nicolaas Beets (theologian, writer and poet) ; Willem Bilderdijk (poet) ; Jacob Geel (scholar, writer and critic) ; Multatuli / Eduard Douwes Dekker (writer) ; Mata Hari (courtesan) ",
"List of romantics\nAdam Gottlob Oehlenschläger (Danish poet, playwright) ; Uładzimir Karatkievič (Belarusian writer) ; Jónas Hallgrímsson (Icelandic poet, political activist) ; Raden Saleh (Indonesian painter) ; Taras Shevchenko (Ukrainian poet) ; Esaias Tegnér (Swedish writer) ; Egide Charles Gustave Wappers (Belgian painter) ; Anne Louise Germaine de Staël (Swiss writer) ; Miguel Barnet (Cuban writer, novelist and ethnographer) ",
"Romance (prose fiction)\n that period include Sir Walter Scott, Alexandre Dumas, père, Jules Verne, Brontë Sisters, H. Rider Haggard, Victor Hugo, Emilio Salgari, Louis Henri Boussenard, Thomas Mayne Reid, Sax Rohmer, Edgar Wallace, and Robert Louis Stevenson. Rider Haggard (1856–1925), author of King Solomon's Mines (\"romantic adventure\"), She: A History of Adventure, was an English writer of adventure fiction set in exotic locations, predominantly Africa, and a pioneer of the lost world literary genre. He was \"part of the literary reaction against domestic realism that has been called a romance revival.\" Other writers following this trend were Robert Louis Stevenson, George MacDonald, and William Morris. Robert Louis Stevenson, wrote romances, including historical romances, in which adventure is often a prominent element (\"adventure, heroism, chivalry\", amongst other ",
"List of authors of erotic works\nAlexander Pushkin, author of the Gabrieliad ; Alexander Trocchi ; Anaïs Nin, author of Delta of Venus ; Andreas Embirikos, author of The Great Eastern ; Anne Rice, also writing as A. N. Roquelaure ; Aran Ashe ; Barry N. Malzberg, author of Screen and writer/editor for Olympia Press ; Caitlín R. Kiernan — author of Frog Toes and Tentacles, Tales from the Woeful Platypus, and Sirenia Digest ; Catherine Robbe-Grillet, writing as Jean de Berg and Jeanne de Berg ; D. H. Lawrence, author of Lady Chatterley's Lover ; Daniel Defoe, author of Moll Flanders ; Elias Gaucher ; Emmanuelle Arsan, author of the novel Emmanuelle and various other works ; Georges Bataille, author ",
"University of Cambridge\n his late epic Paradise Lost, the Restoration poet and playwright John Dryden, the pre-romantic Thomas Gray, best known his Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, whose joint work Lyrical Ballads is often seen to mark the beginning of the Romantic movement, later Romantics such as Lord Byron and the postromantic Alfred, Lord Tennyson, authors of the best known carpe diem poems including Robert Herrick best known \"To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time\" with the first line \"Gather ye rosebuds while ye may\" and Andrew Marvell who authored \"To His Coy Mistress\", classical scholar and lyric poet A. E. Housman, war poets Siegfried Sassoon and Rupert Brooke, ",
"Romance (love)\nLoudin, Jo, The Hoax of Romance. New York: Prentice Hall, 1980. ; Young-Eisendrath, Polly, You're Not Who I Expected. William Morrow & Company, 1993. ; Kierkegaard, Søren. Stages on Life's Way. Transl. Walter Lowrie, D.D. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1940. ; Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Structural Anthropology. London: Allen Lane, 1968; New York: Penguin Books, 1994. Structural Anthropology. (volume 2) London: Allen Lane, 1977; New York: Peregrine Books 1976. ; Nietzsche, Friedrich. Human, All Too Human. Transl. R.J. Hollingdale. Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2nd Edition, 1996. ; Wiseman, Boris. Introducing Lévi-Strauss. New York: Totem Books, 1998. ; Denis de Rougemont, Love in the Western World. Pantheon Books, 1956. ; Francesco Alberoni, Falling in love, New York, Random House, 1983. ; Novak, Michael. Shaw, Elizabeth (editor) The Myth of Romantic Love and Other Essays Transaction Publishers (January 23, 2013). ",
"The Romantic Manifesto\n The Romantic Manifesto: A Philosophy of Literature is a collection of essays regarding the nature of art by the philosopher Ayn Rand. It was first published in 1969, with a second, revised edition published in 1975. Most of the essays are reprinted from Rand's magazine The Objectivist.",
"Historical romance\n to classify Cooper as a strict Romantic, Victor Hugo pronounced him greater than the great master of modern romance. This verdict was echoed by a multitude of less famous readers, such as Balzac and Rudolf Drescher of Germany, who were satisfied with no title for their favourite less than that of the \"American Scott.\" The modern mass-market romance genre was born in America 1972 with Avon's publication of Kathleen Woodiwiss's historical romance The Flame and the Flower. Set around 1900. it is the first romance novel \"to [follow] the principals into the bedroom.\" Aside from its content, the book was revolutionary in that it was one ",
"Jeffrey N. Cox\nWilliam Wordsworth, Second-Generation Romantic: Contesting Poetry after Waterloo. Forthcoming, Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN: 978-1108837613 ; Romanticism in the Shadow of War: Literary Culture in the Napoleonic War Years. Cambridge University Press, 2014. ISBN: 978-1107071940 ; Poetry and Politics in the Cockney School: Shelley, Keats, Hunt, and Their Circle. Cambridge University Press, 1998. Winner of the 2000 South Central Modern Language Association Best Book Award. Hardcover ISBN: 978-0521631006, Paperback ISBN: 978-0521604239 ; In the Shadows of Romance: Romantic Tragic Drama in Germany, England, and France. Ohio University Press, 1987. ISBN: 978-0821408582 "
] |
Who is the author of Buried Thunder? | [
"Tim Bowler"
] | author | Buried Thunder | 3,604,837 | 61 | [
{
"id": "6583427",
"title": "Buried Thunder",
"text": " Buried Thunder is a young adult novel written by British author Tim Bowler. It was first published in 2011 in the UK. It is a psychological thriller whose central character is a fourteen-year-old girl called Maya who has just moved to the countryside with her parents and brother. She senses an evil presence in the hotel where they are living and makes a horrific discovery in the forest nearby.",
"score": "1.8561634"
},
{
"id": "28186112",
"title": "Buried Fire",
"text": " Buried Fire is a fantasy novel by Jonathan Stroud first published in 1999 by The Bodley Head. It was initially part of the Fire Chronicles, but later the series was disbanded by the publisher. It was supposed to be called The Four Gifts.",
"score": "1.4446459"
},
{
"id": "25390498",
"title": "Thunder Cave",
"text": " Thunder Cave is a young adult adventure novel by Roland Smith, first published by Hyperion Books in 1995. It is the first of three books, being followed by Jaguar and The Last Lobo.",
"score": "1.4390419"
},
{
"id": "8429040",
"title": "Tim Bowler",
"text": " a story about memory, secrets and betrayal; Buried Thunder (2011), a dark psychological thriller; and Sea of Whispers (2013), a haunting and mysterious story set on the remote island of Mora. Blade (2008 to 2013) is a series of urban thrillers. Reviewing it for The Bookbag, Jill Murphy wrote, \"Nobody in children's writing is producing anything like this. It's electrifying.\" Some editions in translation (e.g. Germany and Korea) are four books, each comprising two original volumes. Bowler speaks at conferences, schools, and book festivals and makes regular appearances on radio. He lives in a village in Devon and writes in a small stone outhouse. ",
"score": "1.4343227"
},
{
"id": "29797134",
"title": "The House of Thunder",
"text": " The House of Thunder is a novel written by best-selling author Dean Koontz, released in 1982. The book was originally published under the pseudonym Leigh Nichols.",
"score": "1.4263201"
},
{
"id": "29155375",
"title": "Iron Thunderhorse",
"text": " Early in his incarceration, Thunderhorse became a certified paralegal. He served as Editor for Thunderbird Free Press (Native American tribes' and prisoners' rights), and as Briefing Editor for the Prison Law Monitor. His first published work in legal forums was Breaking the Chains (Inside/Out Press, Fresno, CA, 1983) about the history and jurisprudence of self-representation in America. He wrote exclusive columns on prison law in Easyriders, Biker Lifestyle, Iron Horse, Guild Notes, and Voice for the Defense. Thunderhorse was active in the RUIZ VS. ESTELLE prison reform litigation as a class Plaintiff. In 1981, the presiding Judge, William Wayne Justice, appointed Vince Nathan as Special Master ",
"score": "1.4254782"
},
{
"id": "5850825",
"title": "Thunderhead (Preston and Child novel)",
"text": " Bill Smithback, the journalist hired to chronicle the expedition, previously appeared in Preston and Child's Aloysius Pendergast series, and is revealed to have achieved some level of fame based on his novelization of the events depicted in Relic and Reliquary. Nora Kelly later appears as a supporting character in the Pendergast series, starting with The Cabinet of Curiosities in 2002, and her final appearance being in Cemetery Dance in 2009. Then gets her own novel series starting with Old Bones in 2019.",
"score": "1.425319"
},
{
"id": "1876250",
"title": "Blood and Thunder (book)",
"text": " Blood and Thunder: An Epic of the American West (Doubleday, 2001), is a non-fiction book written by American historian and author, Hampton Sides. It focuses on the transformation of the American West during the 19th Century.",
"score": "1.419844"
},
{
"id": "29155380",
"title": "Iron Thunderhorse",
"text": " Thunderhorse has published a special series teaching the basics of many Native American traditional crafts. His book, Return of the Thunderbeings (by Iron Thunderhorse and Donn LeVie, Jr., Santa Fe, Bear & Co., 1990, ISBN: 0-939680-68-8), has chapters on Shamanic art and is full of symbols and designs used as iconography in tribal arts and crafts. All of Thunderhorse's books, booklets, and scholarly studies contain his line drawings, maps, and charts. Four of his illustrations appear in Voices of Native America and he designed the cover for his only authorized biography, Following the Footprints of a Stone Giant: The Life and Times of Iron Thunderhorse. Thunderhorse's historical pictographic portraiture of Tecumseh is on display at the Museums at Prophetstown State Park in Lafayette, Indiana. ",
"score": "1.4104798"
},
{
"id": "28206832",
"title": "William Thomas Quick",
"text": " Quick is the author of 28 novels, the most famous of which is Dreams of Flesh and Sand. He co-authored the six novel Quest for Tomorrow series with William Shatner. He has also written a series of prehistoric adventure novels under the pen name Margaret Allan, the best selling of which was The Last Mammoth. Quick's 2014 novel Lightning Fall, a disaster thriller, was featured in a USA Today column by Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds. Quick's novel and Reynold's column were commented on by other libertarian sources, and Quick wrote that the book reached Amazon's Top 200 sales list, and was #3 in Hard SF sales.",
"score": "1.4092131"
},
{
"id": "7979331",
"title": "Hampton Sides",
"text": " Wade Hampton Sides (born 1962) is an American historian, author and journalist. He is the author of Hellhound on His Trail, Ghost Soldiers, Blood and Thunder, On Desperate Ground, and other bestselling works of narrative history and literary non-fiction. Sides is editor-at-large for Outside magazine and has written for such periodicals as National Geographic, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Esquire, Men's Journal, The American Scholar, Smithsonian, and The Washington Post. His magazine work, collected in numerous published anthologies, has been twice nominated for National Magazine Awards for feature writing.",
"score": "1.4013858"
},
{
"id": "4670937",
"title": "Rand Flem-Ath",
"text": " Rand Flem-Ath (born c.1949) is a Canadian librarian and author known for his books about the lost continent of Atlantis and the theory of Earth crust displacement. Flem-Ath has written numerous fiction and non-fiction where he advances what is known as the pole shift hypothesis.",
"score": "1.3895047"
},
{
"id": "3060302",
"title": "Thunder in the Morning Calm",
"text": " Thunder in the Morning Calm is a 2011 legal-thriller/political thriller written by Don Brown and published in summer 2011. The novel explores whether American servicemen who were listed as missing in action from the Korean War may still be alive in North Korea. It was the first novel released in Brown's Pacific Rim series, published by Zondervan, and Brown has said in interviews that he wrote the novel in part to bring attention to the issue of Korean War POWs detained in North Korea. In 1996, the Eisenhower Presidential Library, also known as the Eisenhower Presidential Center released previously classified documents revealing that the United States left more than 900 men in North Korean prison camps ",
"score": "1.385057"
},
{
"id": "8710100",
"title": "Thunder Warrior",
"text": " A Native American named Thunder returns home following a long absence and discovers a construction company that's destroying a native burial ground, which is a breach of the treaty signed a century ago between his grandfather with the US Government. His attempt to alert the local authorities results in him being escorted out of the county by one of the sheriff's deputies, who order him to stay out of town. Having done no wrong and after being assaulted by the construction workers, Thunder returns and the situation continues to escalate. Leading into a war between the lone native warrior and the entire sheriff department.",
"score": "1.3836911"
},
{
"id": "32617876",
"title": "Ronald Kelly",
"text": " Grinding & Other Twilight Terrors. In 2010, Cemetery Dance released his first novel in over ten years called, Hell Hollow in hardcover. Full Moon Press had made a deal to release all of Ronald Kelly's previous novels in hardcover format with bonus material and a brand new added novella in each release. They were calling the series of books The Essential Ronald Kelly, but the deal fell through when Full Moon Press closed its doors. Shortly afterward, Thunderstorm Books published The Essential Ronald Kelly Collection in seven limited edition hardcovers over a three-year period. During that time, Thunderstorm published Kelly regularly, releasing two ",
"score": "1.3821461"
},
{
"id": "681084",
"title": "The Buried Pyramid",
"text": " The Buried Pyramid is a book written in 2004 by Jane Lindskold and published by Tom Doherty Associates.",
"score": "1.3765659"
},
{
"id": "11157850",
"title": "Dee Brown (writer)",
"text": " a master's degree in library science, became a professor, and raised a son, Mitchell, and daughter, Linda, with his wife Sally. As a part-time writer, he published nine books, three fiction and six nonfiction, by the end of the 1950s. During the 1960s, he completed eight more including The Galvanized Yankees, which Brown described as requiring more research than any of his other books, and The Year of the Century: 1876, which he described as his personal favorite. During 1971, his book Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee became a best-seller. Many readers assumed that Brown was of Native American heritage, but he was not. During 1973, Brown and ",
"score": "1.3715419"
},
{
"id": "29155377",
"title": "Iron Thunderhorse",
"text": " self-taught prison lawyer of incomparable skill and persistence.\" Thunderhorse also co-founded The Thunderbird Alliance, a coalition of Tribes, Medicine Societies, Support Groups, and prison circles to address the many problems faced by Native American religious adherents behind prison walls. He served as Editor-in-Chief for The Thunderbird Free Press, the quarterly forum for the Thunderbird Alliance. Humanity & Society, a journal of humanist sociology, published a special issue about Native American struggles and two Thunderbird Alliance Advocates (one of whom was Thunderhorse), which included an essay on the legacy of the Thunderbird Alliance, from its tribal roots. In 2000, ECOS (the Environmental Council of Stamford) was losing ",
"score": "1.3693252"
},
{
"id": "4535198",
"title": "Thunder Over Jotunheim",
"text": " MH6 Thunder Over Jotunheim was written by Bruce Nesmith, with a cover by Jeff Butler, and was published by TSR, Inc., in 1985 as a 16-page book, a large map, a viewer film, and an outer folder.",
"score": "1.367466"
},
{
"id": "1375391",
"title": "Bob Mayer (author)",
"text": " Robert Mayer is a New York Times-bestselling author and the CEO of Cool Gus Publishing. He is a West Point graduate and former Green Beret. Mayer has authored over 60 novels in multiple genres, selling more than 4 million books, including the #1 series Area 51, Atlantis, and The Green Berets. He has written under the pen names Joe Dalton, Robert Doherty, Greg Donegan and Bob McGuire. He holds the distinction of being the only male author on the Romance Writers of America Honor Roll.",
"score": "1.366274"
}
] | [
"Buried Thunder\n Buried Thunder is a young adult novel written by British author Tim Bowler. It was first published in 2011 in the UK. It is a psychological thriller whose central character is a fourteen-year-old girl called Maya who has just moved to the countryside with her parents and brother. She senses an evil presence in the hotel where they are living and makes a horrific discovery in the forest nearby.",
"Buried Fire\n Buried Fire is a fantasy novel by Jonathan Stroud first published in 1999 by The Bodley Head. It was initially part of the Fire Chronicles, but later the series was disbanded by the publisher. It was supposed to be called The Four Gifts.",
"Thunder Cave\n Thunder Cave is a young adult adventure novel by Roland Smith, first published by Hyperion Books in 1995. It is the first of three books, being followed by Jaguar and The Last Lobo.",
"Tim Bowler\n a story about memory, secrets and betrayal; Buried Thunder (2011), a dark psychological thriller; and Sea of Whispers (2013), a haunting and mysterious story set on the remote island of Mora. Blade (2008 to 2013) is a series of urban thrillers. Reviewing it for The Bookbag, Jill Murphy wrote, \"Nobody in children's writing is producing anything like this. It's electrifying.\" Some editions in translation (e.g. Germany and Korea) are four books, each comprising two original volumes. Bowler speaks at conferences, schools, and book festivals and makes regular appearances on radio. He lives in a village in Devon and writes in a small stone outhouse. ",
"The House of Thunder\n The House of Thunder is a novel written by best-selling author Dean Koontz, released in 1982. The book was originally published under the pseudonym Leigh Nichols.",
"Iron Thunderhorse\n Early in his incarceration, Thunderhorse became a certified paralegal. He served as Editor for Thunderbird Free Press (Native American tribes' and prisoners' rights), and as Briefing Editor for the Prison Law Monitor. His first published work in legal forums was Breaking the Chains (Inside/Out Press, Fresno, CA, 1983) about the history and jurisprudence of self-representation in America. He wrote exclusive columns on prison law in Easyriders, Biker Lifestyle, Iron Horse, Guild Notes, and Voice for the Defense. Thunderhorse was active in the RUIZ VS. ESTELLE prison reform litigation as a class Plaintiff. In 1981, the presiding Judge, William Wayne Justice, appointed Vince Nathan as Special Master ",
"Thunderhead (Preston and Child novel)\n Bill Smithback, the journalist hired to chronicle the expedition, previously appeared in Preston and Child's Aloysius Pendergast series, and is revealed to have achieved some level of fame based on his novelization of the events depicted in Relic and Reliquary. Nora Kelly later appears as a supporting character in the Pendergast series, starting with The Cabinet of Curiosities in 2002, and her final appearance being in Cemetery Dance in 2009. Then gets her own novel series starting with Old Bones in 2019.",
"Blood and Thunder (book)\n Blood and Thunder: An Epic of the American West (Doubleday, 2001), is a non-fiction book written by American historian and author, Hampton Sides. It focuses on the transformation of the American West during the 19th Century.",
"Iron Thunderhorse\n Thunderhorse has published a special series teaching the basics of many Native American traditional crafts. His book, Return of the Thunderbeings (by Iron Thunderhorse and Donn LeVie, Jr., Santa Fe, Bear & Co., 1990, ISBN: 0-939680-68-8), has chapters on Shamanic art and is full of symbols and designs used as iconography in tribal arts and crafts. All of Thunderhorse's books, booklets, and scholarly studies contain his line drawings, maps, and charts. Four of his illustrations appear in Voices of Native America and he designed the cover for his only authorized biography, Following the Footprints of a Stone Giant: The Life and Times of Iron Thunderhorse. Thunderhorse's historical pictographic portraiture of Tecumseh is on display at the Museums at Prophetstown State Park in Lafayette, Indiana. ",
"William Thomas Quick\n Quick is the author of 28 novels, the most famous of which is Dreams of Flesh and Sand. He co-authored the six novel Quest for Tomorrow series with William Shatner. He has also written a series of prehistoric adventure novels under the pen name Margaret Allan, the best selling of which was The Last Mammoth. Quick's 2014 novel Lightning Fall, a disaster thriller, was featured in a USA Today column by Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds. Quick's novel and Reynold's column were commented on by other libertarian sources, and Quick wrote that the book reached Amazon's Top 200 sales list, and was #3 in Hard SF sales.",
"Hampton Sides\n Wade Hampton Sides (born 1962) is an American historian, author and journalist. He is the author of Hellhound on His Trail, Ghost Soldiers, Blood and Thunder, On Desperate Ground, and other bestselling works of narrative history and literary non-fiction. Sides is editor-at-large for Outside magazine and has written for such periodicals as National Geographic, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Esquire, Men's Journal, The American Scholar, Smithsonian, and The Washington Post. His magazine work, collected in numerous published anthologies, has been twice nominated for National Magazine Awards for feature writing.",
"Rand Flem-Ath\n Rand Flem-Ath (born c.1949) is a Canadian librarian and author known for his books about the lost continent of Atlantis and the theory of Earth crust displacement. Flem-Ath has written numerous fiction and non-fiction where he advances what is known as the pole shift hypothesis.",
"Thunder in the Morning Calm\n Thunder in the Morning Calm is a 2011 legal-thriller/political thriller written by Don Brown and published in summer 2011. The novel explores whether American servicemen who were listed as missing in action from the Korean War may still be alive in North Korea. It was the first novel released in Brown's Pacific Rim series, published by Zondervan, and Brown has said in interviews that he wrote the novel in part to bring attention to the issue of Korean War POWs detained in North Korea. In 1996, the Eisenhower Presidential Library, also known as the Eisenhower Presidential Center released previously classified documents revealing that the United States left more than 900 men in North Korean prison camps ",
"Thunder Warrior\n A Native American named Thunder returns home following a long absence and discovers a construction company that's destroying a native burial ground, which is a breach of the treaty signed a century ago between his grandfather with the US Government. His attempt to alert the local authorities results in him being escorted out of the county by one of the sheriff's deputies, who order him to stay out of town. Having done no wrong and after being assaulted by the construction workers, Thunder returns and the situation continues to escalate. Leading into a war between the lone native warrior and the entire sheriff department.",
"Ronald Kelly\n Grinding & Other Twilight Terrors. In 2010, Cemetery Dance released his first novel in over ten years called, Hell Hollow in hardcover. Full Moon Press had made a deal to release all of Ronald Kelly's previous novels in hardcover format with bonus material and a brand new added novella in each release. They were calling the series of books The Essential Ronald Kelly, but the deal fell through when Full Moon Press closed its doors. Shortly afterward, Thunderstorm Books published The Essential Ronald Kelly Collection in seven limited edition hardcovers over a three-year period. During that time, Thunderstorm published Kelly regularly, releasing two ",
"The Buried Pyramid\n The Buried Pyramid is a book written in 2004 by Jane Lindskold and published by Tom Doherty Associates.",
"Dee Brown (writer)\n a master's degree in library science, became a professor, and raised a son, Mitchell, and daughter, Linda, with his wife Sally. As a part-time writer, he published nine books, three fiction and six nonfiction, by the end of the 1950s. During the 1960s, he completed eight more including The Galvanized Yankees, which Brown described as requiring more research than any of his other books, and The Year of the Century: 1876, which he described as his personal favorite. During 1971, his book Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee became a best-seller. Many readers assumed that Brown was of Native American heritage, but he was not. During 1973, Brown and ",
"Iron Thunderhorse\n self-taught prison lawyer of incomparable skill and persistence.\" Thunderhorse also co-founded The Thunderbird Alliance, a coalition of Tribes, Medicine Societies, Support Groups, and prison circles to address the many problems faced by Native American religious adherents behind prison walls. He served as Editor-in-Chief for The Thunderbird Free Press, the quarterly forum for the Thunderbird Alliance. Humanity & Society, a journal of humanist sociology, published a special issue about Native American struggles and two Thunderbird Alliance Advocates (one of whom was Thunderhorse), which included an essay on the legacy of the Thunderbird Alliance, from its tribal roots. In 2000, ECOS (the Environmental Council of Stamford) was losing ",
"Thunder Over Jotunheim\n MH6 Thunder Over Jotunheim was written by Bruce Nesmith, with a cover by Jeff Butler, and was published by TSR, Inc., in 1985 as a 16-page book, a large map, a viewer film, and an outer folder.",
"Bob Mayer (author)\n Robert Mayer is a New York Times-bestselling author and the CEO of Cool Gus Publishing. He is a West Point graduate and former Green Beret. Mayer has authored over 60 novels in multiple genres, selling more than 4 million books, including the #1 series Area 51, Atlantis, and The Green Berets. He has written under the pen names Joe Dalton, Robert Doherty, Greg Donegan and Bob McGuire. He holds the distinction of being the only male author on the Romance Writers of America Honor Roll."
] |
Who is the author of Time Enough? | [
"Damon Knight",
"Damon Francis Knight",
"Stuart Fleming",
"Conanight"
] | author | Time Enough | 1,156,615 | 59 | [
{
"id": "12289706",
"title": "Not Enough Time (manga)",
"text": " Not Enough Time (足りない時間) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Shoko Hidaka (日高 ショーコ). It is licensed in North America by Digital Manga Publishing, which released the manga through its imprint, Juné, on July 25, 2007. It is licensed in Taiwan by Sharp Point Press and in Germany by Carlsen Verlag.",
"score": "1.5510844"
},
{
"id": "6552297",
"title": "Time Enough for Love",
"text": " Time Enough for Love is a science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein, first published in 1973. The work was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1973 and both the Hugo and Locus Awards in 1974.",
"score": "1.4736125"
},
{
"id": "4415384",
"title": "The Enough Moment",
"text": " The Enough Moment: Fighting to End Africa's Worst Human Rights Crimes is the second book co-authored by actor Don Cheadle, and co-founder of the Enough Project and human rights activist, John Prendergast. Cheadle and Prendergast's first book, Not On Our Watch: The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond, was published in 2007.",
"score": "1.4598645"
},
{
"id": "26706816",
"title": "To His Coy Mistress",
"text": " physics (World Enough and Space-Time: Absolute versus Relational Theories of Space and Time), geopolitics (World Enough and Time: Successful Strategies for Resource Management), a science-fiction collection (Worlds Enough & Time: Five Tales of Speculative Fiction), and a biography of the poet (World Enough and Time: The Life of Andrew Marvell). The phrase is used as a title chapter in Andreas Wagner's pop science book on the origin of variation in organisms, \"Arrival of the Fittest\". The verse serves as an epigraph to Mimesis, literary critic Erich Auerbach's most famous book. It is also the title of an episode of Big Finish Productions's The Diary of River Song series ",
"score": "1.4337764"
},
{
"id": "2050498",
"title": "World and Time Enough",
"text": " World and Time Enough is a 1994 independent gay-themed romantic comedy-drama written and directed by Eric Mueller and starring Gregory Giles, Matt Guidry and Kraig Swartz. It was filmed on location in Edina and Minneapolis, Minnesota.",
"score": "1.4167733"
},
{
"id": "6552311",
"title": "Time Enough for Love",
"text": " John Leonard, writing in The New York Times, praised Time Enough for Love as \"a great entertainment\", declaring that \"it doesn't matter [that] all his characters sound and behave exactly the same; it's because the man is a master of beguilement. He pulls so hard of the dugs of sentiment that disbelief is not merely suspended; it is abolished\". Theodore Sturgeon reviewed the novel favorably, citing \"the fascination of watching the mind of a man whose reach always exceeds his grasp but who will never stop reaching\".",
"score": "1.4067942"
},
{
"id": "2050499",
"title": "World and Time Enough",
"text": " Narrated by their friend David (Swartz), World and Time Enough is the story of Mark (Guidry) and Joey (Giles). Mark is an HIV-positive art student who creates temporary \"sculptures\" on topics including AIDS, abortion and the Bush economy. Joey works as a garbage collector, picking up trash along the roadways. He sometimes brings home interesting items that he finds on the job. Mark's mother was killed when he was a child, in a freak accident in a church when she was crushed by a large falling cross. Since that day, his father has been obsessed with building model cathedrals. Mark and his ",
"score": "1.3976095"
},
{
"id": "26706818",
"title": "To His Coy Mistress",
"text": " Science Fiction: the first book of James Kahn's \"New World Series\" is titled \"World Enough, and Time\"; the third book of Joe Haldeman's \"Worlds\" trilogy is titled \"Worlds Enough and Time\"; and Peter S. Beagle's novel A Fine and Private Place about a love affair between two ghosts in a graveyard. The latter phrase has been widely used as a euphemism for the grave, and has formed the title of several mystery novels. Brian Aldiss's novel Hothouse, set in a distant future in which the earth is dominated by plant life, opens with \"My vegetable love should grow / vaster than empires, and more slow.\" Sir Terry ",
"score": "1.3928447"
},
{
"id": "25100219",
"title": "Time Enough at Last",
"text": " \"Witness Mr. Henry Bemis, a charter member in the fraternity of dreamers. A bookish little man whose passion is the printed page, but who is conspired against by a bank president and a wife and a world full of tongue-cluckers and the unrelenting hands of a clock. But in just a moment, Mr. Bemis will enter a world without bank presidents or wives or clocks or anything else. He'll have a world all to himself... without anyone.\"",
"score": "1.3860767"
},
{
"id": "4415385",
"title": "The Enough Moment",
"text": " The Enough Moment details the efforts of both famous and unknown citizen activists, referred to as “Upstanders,” as they work to combat genocide, sexual violence, and child soldierdom in Africa. The book aims to further fuel public demand for an end to the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, the sexual violence in Congo resulting from the deadly trade in conflict minerals, and child soldier recruitment in northern Uganda. The book offers harrowing accounts of how victims of these atrocities have found the strength to help other survivors. The book also describes the actions that U.S. citizens have taken to aid those suffering from human rights abuses and provides practical ways in which ordinary citizens can get involved and make a difference. The book was published by Random House on September 7, 2010.",
"score": "1.3858738"
},
{
"id": "25100224",
"title": "Time Enough at Last",
"text": " \"The best-laid plans of mice and men...and Henry Bemis, the small man in the glasses who wanted nothing but time. Henry Bemis, now just a part of a smashed landscape, just a piece of the rubble, just a fragment of what man has deeded to himself. Mr. Henry Bemis, in the Twilight Zone.\"",
"score": "1.379957"
},
{
"id": "2817331",
"title": "Lee Eisenberg (author)",
"text": " In 1995, Eisenberg joined Time Inc. where he served as a consulting editor of strategic development. His projects included the launch of a variety of special projects, including Time.com, Time for Kids, as well as a series of special issues. He played a major role in creating the Time 100, a chronicle in collaboration with CBS News of the leading men and women of the Twentieth Century.",
"score": "1.3702419"
},
{
"id": "28874012",
"title": "Greene, Iowa",
"text": "Thomas Braden (1917–2009) author of the book Eight Is Enough that was the basis for the ABC show Eight Is Enough ; Henry Norman Graven (1893–1970) United States federal judge from 1944 to 1970 ; Frank D. Jackson (1854–1938) 15th Governor of Iowa from 1894 to 1896 ",
"score": "1.3651948"
},
{
"id": "3966023",
"title": "Once Is Not Enough",
"text": " The book, published by William Morrow on March 20, 1973, met with negative reviews, as was typical for a Susann novel. A writer for The New York Times complained that the book had \"nearly 500 steadily monotonous pages,\" populated by \"a cast of obscure, unpleasant, implausible, stupid or sly characters [who] lurk in the mind for weeks only because one wants to meet and kick them.\" But sales were enormous: the book spent 36 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller List, with eight of those weeks at #1. It became the second highest-selling novel of 1973, behind only Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach.",
"score": "1.3638879"
},
{
"id": "6552305",
"title": "Time Enough for Love",
"text": " There are also two \"Intermission\" sections, each some six or eight pages long, taking the form of lists of provocative phrases and aphorisms not obviously related to the main narrative. They were later published independently, with illustrations, as The Notebooks of Lazarus Long.",
"score": "1.3554142"
},
{
"id": "9811779",
"title": "Jay Griffiths",
"text": " Griffiths's first book was published by Flamingo in 1999. It explores time as a political subject, showing how indigenous cultures have diverse ways of considering time (past, present and future) but illustrating how one, single, European time is colonising all these varieties of time. It is a manifesto for cyclical time and for the times of nature, of carnival, of play: and argues that women’s time is different from men’s. The book was a Book of the Year in The Independent and was described as \"A wonderful, delightfully humorous polemic against everything that's wrong with the way we deal with time today\". Iain Finlayson named it as his book of the ",
"score": "1.3551558"
},
{
"id": "16156309",
"title": "John McPhee",
"text": "David Remnick, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and current editor-in-chief of The New Yorker ; Richard Stengel, former managing editor of Time magazine ; Jim Kelly, former managing editor of Time magazine ; Robert Wright, former senior editor at The New Republic and columnist for Time, Slate and the New York Times, and author of award-winning books ; Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation and other books ; Richard Preston, author of The Hot Zone and other books about infectious disease epidemics and bioterrorism ; Peter Hessler, contributor to The New Yorker and author of three books about China ; Timothy Ferriss, entrepreneur and author of New York Times bestsellers The 4-Hour Workweek and The 4-Hour Body ; Joel Achenbach, writer for the Washington Post and author of seven books ; Jennifer Weiner, best-selling author of Good In Bed, In Her Shoes, and other novels McPhee is also a renowned nonfiction writing instructor at Princeton University, having taught generations of aspiring undergraduate writers. McPhee teaches his writing seminar every year in the spring semester. Many of McPhee's students have achieved their own distinction for writing: ",
"score": "1.3531442"
},
{
"id": "3966020",
"title": "Once Is Not Enough",
"text": " Once Is Not Enough is the third novel by Jacqueline Susann, published in 1973 following her huge bestsellers Valley of the Dolls (1966) and The Love Machine (1969). With Once Is Not Enough, Susann became the first writer in publishing history to have three consecutive #1 novels on the New York Times Best Seller list.",
"score": "1.3526294"
},
{
"id": "25100228",
"title": "Time Enough at Last",
"text": " depicted in \"Time Enough at Last\" has an information age counterpart, according to Weston Ochse of Storytellers Unplugged. As Ochse points out, when Bemis becomes the last person on Earth, he finally has time to read, with all his books at his fingertips and the only impediment is technology when his medium for accessing them—his glasses—breaks. In a hypothetical world where all books are published electronically, Ochse observes, readers would be \"only a lightning strike, a faulty switch, a sleepy workman or a natural disaster away from becoming Henry Bemis at the end of the world\"—that is, a power outage has the potential to give them time to read, yet like Bemis, they too would lose their medium for accessing their books—namely the computer.",
"score": "1.3507789"
},
{
"id": "30277767",
"title": "Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival",
"text": " Fred Luskin, author of Forgive to Love ; Shana Mahaffey, author of Sounds Like Crazy ; Irshad Manji, author of The Trouble with Islam Today ; Frank McCourt, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Angela's Ashes ; Greg Mortenson, activist, Nobel Peace Prize finalist, and author of Three Cups of Tea ; Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor ; P. J. O'Rourke, journalist, author, satirist, regular correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, The American Spectator, and The Weekly Standard, and frequent panelist on National Public Radio's game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! ; Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma ; Frank Portman, author of King ",
"score": "1.350744"
}
] | [
"Not Enough Time (manga)\n Not Enough Time (足りない時間) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Shoko Hidaka (日高 ショーコ). It is licensed in North America by Digital Manga Publishing, which released the manga through its imprint, Juné, on July 25, 2007. It is licensed in Taiwan by Sharp Point Press and in Germany by Carlsen Verlag.",
"Time Enough for Love\n Time Enough for Love is a science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein, first published in 1973. The work was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1973 and both the Hugo and Locus Awards in 1974.",
"The Enough Moment\n The Enough Moment: Fighting to End Africa's Worst Human Rights Crimes is the second book co-authored by actor Don Cheadle, and co-founder of the Enough Project and human rights activist, John Prendergast. Cheadle and Prendergast's first book, Not On Our Watch: The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond, was published in 2007.",
"To His Coy Mistress\n physics (World Enough and Space-Time: Absolute versus Relational Theories of Space and Time), geopolitics (World Enough and Time: Successful Strategies for Resource Management), a science-fiction collection (Worlds Enough & Time: Five Tales of Speculative Fiction), and a biography of the poet (World Enough and Time: The Life of Andrew Marvell). The phrase is used as a title chapter in Andreas Wagner's pop science book on the origin of variation in organisms, \"Arrival of the Fittest\". The verse serves as an epigraph to Mimesis, literary critic Erich Auerbach's most famous book. It is also the title of an episode of Big Finish Productions's The Diary of River Song series ",
"World and Time Enough\n World and Time Enough is a 1994 independent gay-themed romantic comedy-drama written and directed by Eric Mueller and starring Gregory Giles, Matt Guidry and Kraig Swartz. It was filmed on location in Edina and Minneapolis, Minnesota.",
"Time Enough for Love\n John Leonard, writing in The New York Times, praised Time Enough for Love as \"a great entertainment\", declaring that \"it doesn't matter [that] all his characters sound and behave exactly the same; it's because the man is a master of beguilement. He pulls so hard of the dugs of sentiment that disbelief is not merely suspended; it is abolished\". Theodore Sturgeon reviewed the novel favorably, citing \"the fascination of watching the mind of a man whose reach always exceeds his grasp but who will never stop reaching\".",
"World and Time Enough\n Narrated by their friend David (Swartz), World and Time Enough is the story of Mark (Guidry) and Joey (Giles). Mark is an HIV-positive art student who creates temporary \"sculptures\" on topics including AIDS, abortion and the Bush economy. Joey works as a garbage collector, picking up trash along the roadways. He sometimes brings home interesting items that he finds on the job. Mark's mother was killed when he was a child, in a freak accident in a church when she was crushed by a large falling cross. Since that day, his father has been obsessed with building model cathedrals. Mark and his ",
"To His Coy Mistress\n Science Fiction: the first book of James Kahn's \"New World Series\" is titled \"World Enough, and Time\"; the third book of Joe Haldeman's \"Worlds\" trilogy is titled \"Worlds Enough and Time\"; and Peter S. Beagle's novel A Fine and Private Place about a love affair between two ghosts in a graveyard. The latter phrase has been widely used as a euphemism for the grave, and has formed the title of several mystery novels. Brian Aldiss's novel Hothouse, set in a distant future in which the earth is dominated by plant life, opens with \"My vegetable love should grow / vaster than empires, and more slow.\" Sir Terry ",
"Time Enough at Last\n \"Witness Mr. Henry Bemis, a charter member in the fraternity of dreamers. A bookish little man whose passion is the printed page, but who is conspired against by a bank president and a wife and a world full of tongue-cluckers and the unrelenting hands of a clock. But in just a moment, Mr. Bemis will enter a world without bank presidents or wives or clocks or anything else. He'll have a world all to himself... without anyone.\"",
"The Enough Moment\n The Enough Moment details the efforts of both famous and unknown citizen activists, referred to as “Upstanders,” as they work to combat genocide, sexual violence, and child soldierdom in Africa. The book aims to further fuel public demand for an end to the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, the sexual violence in Congo resulting from the deadly trade in conflict minerals, and child soldier recruitment in northern Uganda. The book offers harrowing accounts of how victims of these atrocities have found the strength to help other survivors. The book also describes the actions that U.S. citizens have taken to aid those suffering from human rights abuses and provides practical ways in which ordinary citizens can get involved and make a difference. The book was published by Random House on September 7, 2010.",
"Time Enough at Last\n \"The best-laid plans of mice and men...and Henry Bemis, the small man in the glasses who wanted nothing but time. Henry Bemis, now just a part of a smashed landscape, just a piece of the rubble, just a fragment of what man has deeded to himself. Mr. Henry Bemis, in the Twilight Zone.\"",
"Lee Eisenberg (author)\n In 1995, Eisenberg joined Time Inc. where he served as a consulting editor of strategic development. His projects included the launch of a variety of special projects, including Time.com, Time for Kids, as well as a series of special issues. He played a major role in creating the Time 100, a chronicle in collaboration with CBS News of the leading men and women of the Twentieth Century.",
"Greene, Iowa\nThomas Braden (1917–2009) author of the book Eight Is Enough that was the basis for the ABC show Eight Is Enough ; Henry Norman Graven (1893–1970) United States federal judge from 1944 to 1970 ; Frank D. Jackson (1854–1938) 15th Governor of Iowa from 1894 to 1896 ",
"Once Is Not Enough\n The book, published by William Morrow on March 20, 1973, met with negative reviews, as was typical for a Susann novel. A writer for The New York Times complained that the book had \"nearly 500 steadily monotonous pages,\" populated by \"a cast of obscure, unpleasant, implausible, stupid or sly characters [who] lurk in the mind for weeks only because one wants to meet and kick them.\" But sales were enormous: the book spent 36 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller List, with eight of those weeks at #1. It became the second highest-selling novel of 1973, behind only Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach.",
"Time Enough for Love\n There are also two \"Intermission\" sections, each some six or eight pages long, taking the form of lists of provocative phrases and aphorisms not obviously related to the main narrative. They were later published independently, with illustrations, as The Notebooks of Lazarus Long.",
"Jay Griffiths\n Griffiths's first book was published by Flamingo in 1999. It explores time as a political subject, showing how indigenous cultures have diverse ways of considering time (past, present and future) but illustrating how one, single, European time is colonising all these varieties of time. It is a manifesto for cyclical time and for the times of nature, of carnival, of play: and argues that women’s time is different from men’s. The book was a Book of the Year in The Independent and was described as \"A wonderful, delightfully humorous polemic against everything that's wrong with the way we deal with time today\". Iain Finlayson named it as his book of the ",
"John McPhee\nDavid Remnick, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and current editor-in-chief of The New Yorker ; Richard Stengel, former managing editor of Time magazine ; Jim Kelly, former managing editor of Time magazine ; Robert Wright, former senior editor at The New Republic and columnist for Time, Slate and the New York Times, and author of award-winning books ; Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation and other books ; Richard Preston, author of The Hot Zone and other books about infectious disease epidemics and bioterrorism ; Peter Hessler, contributor to The New Yorker and author of three books about China ; Timothy Ferriss, entrepreneur and author of New York Times bestsellers The 4-Hour Workweek and The 4-Hour Body ; Joel Achenbach, writer for the Washington Post and author of seven books ; Jennifer Weiner, best-selling author of Good In Bed, In Her Shoes, and other novels McPhee is also a renowned nonfiction writing instructor at Princeton University, having taught generations of aspiring undergraduate writers. McPhee teaches his writing seminar every year in the spring semester. Many of McPhee's students have achieved their own distinction for writing: ",
"Once Is Not Enough\n Once Is Not Enough is the third novel by Jacqueline Susann, published in 1973 following her huge bestsellers Valley of the Dolls (1966) and The Love Machine (1969). With Once Is Not Enough, Susann became the first writer in publishing history to have three consecutive #1 novels on the New York Times Best Seller list.",
"Time Enough at Last\n depicted in \"Time Enough at Last\" has an information age counterpart, according to Weston Ochse of Storytellers Unplugged. As Ochse points out, when Bemis becomes the last person on Earth, he finally has time to read, with all his books at his fingertips and the only impediment is technology when his medium for accessing them—his glasses—breaks. In a hypothetical world where all books are published electronically, Ochse observes, readers would be \"only a lightning strike, a faulty switch, a sleepy workman or a natural disaster away from becoming Henry Bemis at the end of the world\"—that is, a power outage has the potential to give them time to read, yet like Bemis, they too would lose their medium for accessing their books—namely the computer.",
"Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival\n Fred Luskin, author of Forgive to Love ; Shana Mahaffey, author of Sounds Like Crazy ; Irshad Manji, author of The Trouble with Islam Today ; Frank McCourt, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Angela's Ashes ; Greg Mortenson, activist, Nobel Peace Prize finalist, and author of Three Cups of Tea ; Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor ; P. J. O'Rourke, journalist, author, satirist, regular correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, The American Spectator, and The Weekly Standard, and frequent panelist on National Public Radio's game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! ; Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma ; Frank Portman, author of King "
] |
Who is the author of Operator? | [
"David Williamson",
"David Keith Williamson"
] | author | Operator (play) | 5,346,275 | 70 | [
{
"id": "33466",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " Operator is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by Logan Kibens from a screenplay by Sharon Greene and Logan Kibens. It stars Martin Starr as Joe, a programmer and obsessive self-quantifier, and Mae Whitman as Emily, a budding comedy performer, who are a happily married couple until they decide to use one another in their work. Nat Faxon, Cameron Esposito, Retta, and Christine Lahti co-star. The film had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 12, 2016 and was released by The Orchard on November 8, 2016.",
"score": "1.647727"
},
{
"id": "2946490",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": " Operator is an American post-grunge band from Los Angeles, California, United States. The name Operator was used for a solo project created by Johnny Strong, an actor and musician, who has appeared in movies such as Black Hawk Down (2001), The Fast and the Furious (2001), Get Carter (2000) and The Glimmer Man (1996).",
"score": "1.6110582"
},
{
"id": "15336200",
"title": "Jack Deere",
"text": " C. Peter Wagner said this book “is the new operator’s manual for those who want to be participants, not just spectators, in today’s prophetic movement. This book will help you put it all together, get it up and running, and troubleshoot whatever problems arise.”",
"score": "1.6023571"
},
{
"id": "11323341",
"title": "Operator (play)",
"text": " Operator is a play by David Williamson. Williamson's son Rory played the lead role during its original production.",
"score": "1.5860887"
},
{
"id": "7379912",
"title": "Operator (2015 film)",
"text": " Operator is a 2015 American action thriller drama film directed by Amariah Olson and Obin Olson and starring Luke Goss, Mischa Barton, Michael Paré and Ving Rhames.",
"score": "1.5692788"
},
{
"id": "25160371",
"title": "Operator (album)",
"text": " Operator is the third studio album by Canadian electronic music duo Mstrkrft. It was released on July 22, 2016, by Last Gang Records.",
"score": "1.53407"
},
{
"id": "12013577",
"title": "Kim Harrison",
"text": "1) The Drafter (September 1, 2015, ISBN: 978-1-50-110869-3) ; 2) The Operator (November 22, 2016, ISBN: 978-1-40-870758-6) ",
"score": "1.4920883"
},
{
"id": "33031239",
"title": "Operator (Motown song)",
"text": " \"Operator\" is a Motown song recorded by Motown vocalists Mary Wells and Brenda Holloway. The Wells version was the b-side to her top ten hit, \"Two Lovers\" while Holloway's was issued as a single in 1965.",
"score": "1.4865448"
},
{
"id": "33467",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " Joe (Martin Starr) is a programmer with a crippling anxiety problem who is unable to deal with uncertainty. At work he is tasked with creating an interactive call center answering machine that can convey empathy. Joe recruits his wife Emily (Mae Whitman) who has the perfect voice for the system. Emily works at the front desk of a swanky hotel during the day and has an uncanny ability to soothe even the most irate guests (at night she performs with a comedy group at the Neo-Futurists). After years of being happily married, the pressures of work, family, and personal growth have strained their ",
"score": "1.4848099"
},
{
"id": "13885464",
"title": "Operator No. 5",
"text": " The magazine ran for 48 issues, from April 1934 to November 1939. One final story was written but never published. Stories were all credited to \"Curtis Steele\", which was a house name for writers Frederick C. Davis (#1-20), Emile C. Tepperman (#21-39), and Wayne Rogers (#40-48). Like other such pulps of the day, there were short backup stories by other authors. Davis left because he got fed up with the publisher's demand of trying to think up a new evil super-power attacking America every issue. Tepperman solved this by writing 13 interconnected novels (starting with #26) that make up The Purple Invasion, a series in which the Purple Empire (an unnamed European power which is a thinly veiled Nazi Germany) conquers the United States after ",
"score": "1.4747056"
},
{
"id": "31468743",
"title": "The Operators (band)",
"text": " The Operators are a British indie rock band. Their songs include \"Mountain\", \"Just My Way\" and \"It Grinds\".",
"score": "1.4623921"
},
{
"id": "4862629",
"title": "Operator (Midnight Star song)",
"text": " \"Operator\" is a 1984 R&B/dance song by Midnight Star, produced by then-current bandmember Reginald Calloway, released as a single from their album, Planetary Invasion.",
"score": "1.4591442"
},
{
"id": "25160375",
"title": "Operator (album)",
"text": " In support of the album, the band went on a North American tour from June 1, 2016 at the U Street Music Hall in Washington, D.C. to June 14, 2016 at The Horseshoe Tavern in Ontario, Canada.",
"score": "1.4581785"
},
{
"id": "4869359",
"title": "Gerard Murphy (mathematician)",
"text": " C*-Algebras and Operator Theory This book has become a standard textbook in many countries, and is often cited as a reference in research articles. The book was published in 1990 by Academic Press. Its aim is to give an introduction to one of the most dynamic areas of modern mathematics. It is directed at first and second year graduate students intending to specialise in research in operator algebras and at interested researchers from other areas, especially quantum physicists. He attempted to give an accessible exposition of the core material and to cover a number of topics that have a high contemporary profile. No attempt is made to be encyclopedic but there are notes at the end of each chapter giving additional results not covered in ",
"score": "1.4514091"
},
{
"id": "2946495",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": "Johnny Strong – lead vocals (2003–present) ; Paul Phillips – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Ricki Lixx – lead guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Wade Carrpenter – bass guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Dorman Pantfoeder – drums, percussion (2003–present) ",
"score": "1.4501439"
},
{
"id": "27563509",
"title": "İbrahim Kavrakoğlu",
"text": " He is the author of 24 books and more than 130 papers, including lead articles and invited papers in the European Journal of Operational Research, Mathematical Modeling, Omega, Automatica, Interfaces and Operations Research. The most recent, \"Knowledge Leveraging - Post Modern O.R.,\" appeared in the April 2004 issue of OR/MS Today.",
"score": "1.4496331"
},
{
"id": "33471",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " The film premiered to positive reviews at the South by Southwest festival on March 12, 2016. On May 25, 2016, it was announced that The Orchard had acquired distribution rights to the film. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 7.19/10.",
"score": "1.4476168"
},
{
"id": "30839625",
"title": "Operator 13",
"text": " Operator 13 is a 1934 American pre-Code romance film directed by Richard Boleslawski and starring Marion Davies, Gary Cooper, and Jean Parker. Based on stories written by Robert W. Chambers, the film is about a Union spy who impersonates a black maid in the early days of the Civil War, but complications arise when she falls in love with a Confederate officer. George J. Folsey received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cinematography. The film features the Four Mills Brothers and Davies performing musical numbers and the supporting cast includes Ted Healy, Douglas Dumbrille as Jeb Stuart, Sidney Toler as Allan Pinkerton, Fuzzy Knight, and an uncredited Sterling Holloway as a wounded Union soldier.",
"score": "1.4436448"
},
{
"id": "13885461",
"title": "Operator No. 5",
"text": " Operator #5 was a pulp hero that appeared in his own ten cent pulp magazine. It was soon renamed Secret Service Operator #5 and was published by Popular Publications between 1934 and 1939.",
"score": "1.4382346"
},
{
"id": "2946491",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": " The first Operator album, Can You Hear Me Now (2003), was a self-released demo, and is very hard to find as well as sold out on the band's website. But soon, it attracted the attention of Atlantic Records, which signed Operator in 2007. Strong soon began recording Operator's Atlantic debut as a solo album playing the lead/rhythm guitar, Bass, Piano, backing and lead vocals. He eventually put together a band to play live; rhythm consisting of guitarist Paul Phillips, Lead guitarist Rikki Lixx, bassist Wade Carpenter, and drummer Dorman Pantfoeder completed the lineup. Thus aggregated, Operator's Atlantic debut, Soulcrusher, was released in the summer of 2007. The album has since sold over 110,000 copies and peaked ",
"score": "1.4371777"
}
] | [
"Operator (2016 film)\n Operator is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by Logan Kibens from a screenplay by Sharon Greene and Logan Kibens. It stars Martin Starr as Joe, a programmer and obsessive self-quantifier, and Mae Whitman as Emily, a budding comedy performer, who are a happily married couple until they decide to use one another in their work. Nat Faxon, Cameron Esposito, Retta, and Christine Lahti co-star. The film had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 12, 2016 and was released by The Orchard on November 8, 2016.",
"Operator (band)\n Operator is an American post-grunge band from Los Angeles, California, United States. The name Operator was used for a solo project created by Johnny Strong, an actor and musician, who has appeared in movies such as Black Hawk Down (2001), The Fast and the Furious (2001), Get Carter (2000) and The Glimmer Man (1996).",
"Jack Deere\n C. Peter Wagner said this book “is the new operator’s manual for those who want to be participants, not just spectators, in today’s prophetic movement. This book will help you put it all together, get it up and running, and troubleshoot whatever problems arise.”",
"Operator (play)\n Operator is a play by David Williamson. Williamson's son Rory played the lead role during its original production.",
"Operator (2015 film)\n Operator is a 2015 American action thriller drama film directed by Amariah Olson and Obin Olson and starring Luke Goss, Mischa Barton, Michael Paré and Ving Rhames.",
"Operator (album)\n Operator is the third studio album by Canadian electronic music duo Mstrkrft. It was released on July 22, 2016, by Last Gang Records.",
"Kim Harrison\n1) The Drafter (September 1, 2015, ISBN: 978-1-50-110869-3) ; 2) The Operator (November 22, 2016, ISBN: 978-1-40-870758-6) ",
"Operator (Motown song)\n \"Operator\" is a Motown song recorded by Motown vocalists Mary Wells and Brenda Holloway. The Wells version was the b-side to her top ten hit, \"Two Lovers\" while Holloway's was issued as a single in 1965.",
"Operator (2016 film)\n Joe (Martin Starr) is a programmer with a crippling anxiety problem who is unable to deal with uncertainty. At work he is tasked with creating an interactive call center answering machine that can convey empathy. Joe recruits his wife Emily (Mae Whitman) who has the perfect voice for the system. Emily works at the front desk of a swanky hotel during the day and has an uncanny ability to soothe even the most irate guests (at night she performs with a comedy group at the Neo-Futurists). After years of being happily married, the pressures of work, family, and personal growth have strained their ",
"Operator No. 5\n The magazine ran for 48 issues, from April 1934 to November 1939. One final story was written but never published. Stories were all credited to \"Curtis Steele\", which was a house name for writers Frederick C. Davis (#1-20), Emile C. Tepperman (#21-39), and Wayne Rogers (#40-48). Like other such pulps of the day, there were short backup stories by other authors. Davis left because he got fed up with the publisher's demand of trying to think up a new evil super-power attacking America every issue. Tepperman solved this by writing 13 interconnected novels (starting with #26) that make up The Purple Invasion, a series in which the Purple Empire (an unnamed European power which is a thinly veiled Nazi Germany) conquers the United States after ",
"The Operators (band)\n The Operators are a British indie rock band. Their songs include \"Mountain\", \"Just My Way\" and \"It Grinds\".",
"Operator (Midnight Star song)\n \"Operator\" is a 1984 R&B/dance song by Midnight Star, produced by then-current bandmember Reginald Calloway, released as a single from their album, Planetary Invasion.",
"Operator (album)\n In support of the album, the band went on a North American tour from June 1, 2016 at the U Street Music Hall in Washington, D.C. to June 14, 2016 at The Horseshoe Tavern in Ontario, Canada.",
"Gerard Murphy (mathematician)\n C*-Algebras and Operator Theory This book has become a standard textbook in many countries, and is often cited as a reference in research articles. The book was published in 1990 by Academic Press. Its aim is to give an introduction to one of the most dynamic areas of modern mathematics. It is directed at first and second year graduate students intending to specialise in research in operator algebras and at interested researchers from other areas, especially quantum physicists. He attempted to give an accessible exposition of the core material and to cover a number of topics that have a high contemporary profile. No attempt is made to be encyclopedic but there are notes at the end of each chapter giving additional results not covered in ",
"Operator (band)\nJohnny Strong – lead vocals (2003–present) ; Paul Phillips – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Ricki Lixx – lead guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Wade Carrpenter – bass guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Dorman Pantfoeder – drums, percussion (2003–present) ",
"İbrahim Kavrakoğlu\n He is the author of 24 books and more than 130 papers, including lead articles and invited papers in the European Journal of Operational Research, Mathematical Modeling, Omega, Automatica, Interfaces and Operations Research. The most recent, \"Knowledge Leveraging - Post Modern O.R.,\" appeared in the April 2004 issue of OR/MS Today.",
"Operator (2016 film)\n The film premiered to positive reviews at the South by Southwest festival on March 12, 2016. On May 25, 2016, it was announced that The Orchard had acquired distribution rights to the film. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 7.19/10.",
"Operator 13\n Operator 13 is a 1934 American pre-Code romance film directed by Richard Boleslawski and starring Marion Davies, Gary Cooper, and Jean Parker. Based on stories written by Robert W. Chambers, the film is about a Union spy who impersonates a black maid in the early days of the Civil War, but complications arise when she falls in love with a Confederate officer. George J. Folsey received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cinematography. The film features the Four Mills Brothers and Davies performing musical numbers and the supporting cast includes Ted Healy, Douglas Dumbrille as Jeb Stuart, Sidney Toler as Allan Pinkerton, Fuzzy Knight, and an uncredited Sterling Holloway as a wounded Union soldier.",
"Operator No. 5\n Operator #5 was a pulp hero that appeared in his own ten cent pulp magazine. It was soon renamed Secret Service Operator #5 and was published by Popular Publications between 1934 and 1939.",
"Operator (band)\n The first Operator album, Can You Hear Me Now (2003), was a self-released demo, and is very hard to find as well as sold out on the band's website. But soon, it attracted the attention of Atlantic Records, which signed Operator in 2007. Strong soon began recording Operator's Atlantic debut as a solo album playing the lead/rhythm guitar, Bass, Piano, backing and lead vocals. He eventually put together a band to play live; rhythm consisting of guitarist Paul Phillips, Lead guitarist Rikki Lixx, bassist Wade Carpenter, and drummer Dorman Pantfoeder completed the lineup. Thus aggregated, Operator's Atlantic debut, Soulcrusher, was released in the summer of 2007. The album has since sold over 110,000 copies and peaked "
] |
Who is the author of Sail? | [
"James Patterson",
"James Brendan Patterson",
"James B. Patterson"
] | author | Sail (novel) | 1,120,770 | 46 | [
{
"id": "12718891",
"title": "Tom Cunliffe",
"text": " Cunliffe has been a regular contributor to Yachting Monthly, Yachting World, Sail magazine,Classic Boat and 'Sailing Today' for many years. A professional writer since 1986, Cunliffe has won the Best Book of the Sea award twice, for Topsail and Battleaxe and Hand, Reef and Steer. He is author of the important Shell Channel Pilot for the English Channel. In 2010 he presented the award-winning six-part BBC documentary series, The Boats that Built Britain. He also presented the popular 'Boat Yard' series for Discovery TV. He now has a big following on his Youtube channel, 'Yachts and Yarns'.",
"score": "1.5994642"
},
{
"id": "28253053",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " Sail was born in London and brought up in Exeter. He studied French and German at Oxford University and subsequently taught for some years in Kenya, before returning to the UK, where he taught at Blundell's School and, later, Exeter School (where the modern languages department was headed by Harry Guest, another published poet). He is now a freelance writer. Sail has published nine poetry collections, the most recent being Eye-Baby (2006); The World Returning (2002), Building into Air (1995), and Out of Land: New and Selected Poems (1992), and has edited a number of anthologies, including The New Exeter Book of Riddles (1999) with Kevin ",
"score": "1.594529"
},
{
"id": "29383029",
"title": "John Rousmaniere",
"text": "1982 – co-writer,The Compleat Beatles. ASIN 6301966376. ; 1987–88 – host and writer, The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Volume One: Cruising Under Sail (ISBN: 0-924819-00-6) and four subsequent instructional videos in this series on sailing, plus a video on powerboat navigation. ; 2011 – host, Lifesling Training Video, The Sailing Foundation. ; 2011 – Report of Annapolis accident review, U.S. Sailing Association Annual Meeting, October 29, 2011. ",
"score": "1.5937154"
},
{
"id": "13853958",
"title": "John Cutler (sailor)",
"text": "Co-Author “Understanding Match Racing” (North Sails CD) now in its fourth edition ; Authored rules and tactics for Virtual Spectator (America's Cup 30 & 31) ; Coach – New Zealand Olympic Sailing Team Barcelona (1992) and Atlanta (1996). ",
"score": "1.572998"
},
{
"id": "28253054",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " and First and Always: Poems for Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital (1988). He also edited South-West Review from 1980 to 1985. Sail works in schools and colleges, and has also written a radio play, as well as short features for radio. He has presented the BBC Radio 3 programme 'Poetry Now' and 'Time for Verse' on BBC Radio 4. He was chairman of the Arvon Foundation from 1990 to 1994, has directed the Cheltenham Literature Festival, was the UK jury member for the European Literature Prize (1994–96), has been a judge for the Whitbread Prize and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.",
"score": "1.542679"
},
{
"id": "26557264",
"title": "Evans Starzinger",
"text": " 2007 National Outdoor Book Awards. It is the first time a sailing book has won the Literature prize. The announcement is on the NOBA website. Evans Starzinger and Beth Leonard are among the leading blue water cruising sailors today. During the 1990s they completed a circumnavigation aboard a Shannon 37' ketch, using the typical tropical route but including Cape Hope. During the 2000s they have taken a custom built Van De Stadt designed 47' aluminum fractional sloop on a second circumnavigation, above the Arctic Circle and around all five great capes - Cape Horn, Cape of Good Hope, Cape Leeuwin, South West Cape, Tasmania, and South ",
"score": "1.5387483"
},
{
"id": "29382999",
"title": "John Rousmaniere",
"text": " John Rousmaniere is an American writer and author of 30 historical. technical, and instructional books on sailing, yachting history, New York history, business history, and the histories of clubs, businesses, and other organizations. An authority on seamanship and boating safety, he has conducted tests of equipment and sailing skills, and led or participated in fact-finding inquiries into boating accidents. He has been presented with several awards for his writing and his contributions to boating safety and seamanship.",
"score": "1.5222187"
},
{
"id": "26697293",
"title": "Brian M. Fagan",
"text": " An avid sailor since childhood, Fagan wrote sailing guides to many locations on the Pacific coast of the United States and published them under his own imprint. Now retired from UC Santa Barbara, he lives in the Santa Barbara area with his wife, one of his two daughters, and numerous cats and rabbits.",
"score": "1.5216749"
},
{
"id": "15853861",
"title": "Dick Tillman",
"text": " He wrote The Complete Book of Laser Sailing, published by McGraw Hill in 2005.",
"score": "1.520787"
},
{
"id": "25526624",
"title": "Nathaniel Philbrick",
"text": " After graduate school, Philbrick worked for four years as an editor at Sailing World magazine. He then worked as a freelancer for a number of years, during which time he was the primary caregiver for his two children while writing and editing several books about sailing, including The Passionate Sailor, Second Wind, and Yaahting: A Parody. In 1986, Philbrick moved to Nantucket with his wife Melissa and their two children. In 1994, he published his first book about the island’s history, Away Off Shore, followed in 1998 by a study of the Nantucket’s native legacy, Abram’s Eyes. He is the founding director of Nantucket’s Egan Maritime Institute and is a research fellow at the Nantucket Historical Association.",
"score": "1.5202254"
},
{
"id": "414944",
"title": "Bill Robinson (author)",
"text": " William Wheeler Robinson (October 4, 1918 – April 3, 2007) was an American sailor, author and editor well known in the national and international sailing community for his 27 nautical books, speaking engagements, and contributions to nautical publications. Robinson was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and attended Princeton University from 1935 to 1939, graduating with a degree in English. He received a commission in the United States Naval Reserve in 1941 and served as an officer until 1945. He commanded a 110-foot wooden Navy subchaser - hull number SC 743 - in the Pacific theater during World War II - ",
"score": "1.510752"
},
{
"id": "27542957",
"title": "William H. White (maritime writer)",
"text": " William H. White is an American writer specializing in historical novels relating to the age of sail.",
"score": "1.5077071"
},
{
"id": "31493347",
"title": "Clare Francis",
"text": " After writing three accounts of her experiences while sailing, she turned to fiction and is the author of eight best-sellers.",
"score": "1.5063875"
},
{
"id": "5782334",
"title": "Chris Eakin",
"text": " He wrote the book \"A Race Too Far\" which describes the 1968 sailing race to be the first person to sail non-stop round the world single-handed.",
"score": "1.5022621"
},
{
"id": "842469",
"title": "List of sailors",
"text": "John Arthur Barry, Australian journalist and author ; Peter Baynham, Welsh screenwriter; Academy Award-nominated; co-writer of Borat ; John Blackburn, British novelist ; Nathaniel Bowditch, author, The American Practical Navigator ; E. S. Campbell, American author, broadcaster and radio officer ; A. Bertram Chandler, Australian science fiction author of over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction ; Brian Cleeve, English writer and popular TV broadcaster ; Richard Henry Dana Jr., American author, Two Years Before the Mast ; Clare Francis, British novelist ; Allen Ginsberg, poet, \"Howl\", \"Kaddish\" ; David Hackworth, retired United States Army colonel and military journalist ; John L. Hess, American journalist ; Herbert Huncke, American beat generation ",
"score": "1.4953092"
},
{
"id": "25823957",
"title": "Eric and Susan Hiscock",
"text": " Eric Charles Hiscock (14 March 1908 – 15 September 1986) was a British sailor and author of books on small boat sailing and ocean cruising. Together with his wife and crew Susan Oakes Hiscock (née Sclater, 18 May 1913 – 12 May 1995), he authored numerous accounts of their short cruises and world circumnavigations, accomplished over several decades. His works also include several technical how-to books on sailing and ocean cruising and a film made on board Wanderer III entitled Beyond The West Horizon.",
"score": "1.4860868"
},
{
"id": "7730444",
"title": "Barry Gifford",
"text": " Barry Gifford (born October 18, 1946) is an American author, poet, and screenwriter known for his distinctive mix of American landscapes and prose influenced by film noir and Beat Generation writers. Gifford is best known for his series of novels about Sailor and Lula, two star-crossed protagonists on a perpetual road trip. Published in seven novels between 1990 and 2015, the Sailor and Lula series is described by professor Andrei Codrescu as written in \"a great comic realist\" style that explores \"an unmistakably American universe [...] populated by a huge and lovable humanity propelled on a tragic river of excess energy.\" The first book of the ",
"score": "1.4848357"
},
{
"id": "8935857",
"title": "Maritime history of the United Kingdom",
"text": " Britain has had many authors who wrote on marine topics, the sailing era being a popular period. Joseph Conrad, who was born in Poland in 1857, came to Britain in 1878 and was naturalised in 1886. He undertook a voyage in a collier and then a wool clipper, obtaining a master's ticket in 1887. His last voyage in 1916 was in a Q-ship during the war. Conrad wrote many stories based on his experiences, such as \"Lord Jim\". Basil Lubbock went out to the Klondike and then sailed back from San Francisco on a grain ship. From this he wrote \"Round the Horn before the Mast\" describing the life of an ordinary seaman. After settling down in England he collected facts on sailing ships and wrote books about them. Alan Villiers first sailed in a British square rigger and then in Danish ones. He bought a small Danish fully rigged ship and sailed around the world. After his return he wrote books about square riggers. Many works of fiction have also been written, perhaps the most famous being the series on Horatio Hornblower by C. S. Forester.",
"score": "1.4812131"
},
{
"id": "26322652",
"title": "SAIL High School",
"text": " A 501c(3) nonprofit exists in the form of the SAIL High School Foundation, promoting alumni involvement in SAIL's future direction. Notable SAIL alumni include the fantasy author Jesse Bullington (also published as Alex Marshall).",
"score": "1.4808435"
},
{
"id": "28253052",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " Lawrence Sail (born 29 October 1942) is a contemporary British poet and writer.",
"score": "1.479547"
}
] | [
"Tom Cunliffe\n Cunliffe has been a regular contributor to Yachting Monthly, Yachting World, Sail magazine,Classic Boat and 'Sailing Today' for many years. A professional writer since 1986, Cunliffe has won the Best Book of the Sea award twice, for Topsail and Battleaxe and Hand, Reef and Steer. He is author of the important Shell Channel Pilot for the English Channel. In 2010 he presented the award-winning six-part BBC documentary series, The Boats that Built Britain. He also presented the popular 'Boat Yard' series for Discovery TV. He now has a big following on his Youtube channel, 'Yachts and Yarns'.",
"Lawrence Sail\n Sail was born in London and brought up in Exeter. He studied French and German at Oxford University and subsequently taught for some years in Kenya, before returning to the UK, where he taught at Blundell's School and, later, Exeter School (where the modern languages department was headed by Harry Guest, another published poet). He is now a freelance writer. Sail has published nine poetry collections, the most recent being Eye-Baby (2006); The World Returning (2002), Building into Air (1995), and Out of Land: New and Selected Poems (1992), and has edited a number of anthologies, including The New Exeter Book of Riddles (1999) with Kevin ",
"John Rousmaniere\n1982 – co-writer,The Compleat Beatles. ASIN 6301966376. ; 1987–88 – host and writer, The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Volume One: Cruising Under Sail (ISBN: 0-924819-00-6) and four subsequent instructional videos in this series on sailing, plus a video on powerboat navigation. ; 2011 – host, Lifesling Training Video, The Sailing Foundation. ; 2011 – Report of Annapolis accident review, U.S. Sailing Association Annual Meeting, October 29, 2011. ",
"John Cutler (sailor)\nCo-Author “Understanding Match Racing” (North Sails CD) now in its fourth edition ; Authored rules and tactics for Virtual Spectator (America's Cup 30 & 31) ; Coach – New Zealand Olympic Sailing Team Barcelona (1992) and Atlanta (1996). ",
"Lawrence Sail\n and First and Always: Poems for Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital (1988). He also edited South-West Review from 1980 to 1985. Sail works in schools and colleges, and has also written a radio play, as well as short features for radio. He has presented the BBC Radio 3 programme 'Poetry Now' and 'Time for Verse' on BBC Radio 4. He was chairman of the Arvon Foundation from 1990 to 1994, has directed the Cheltenham Literature Festival, was the UK jury member for the European Literature Prize (1994–96), has been a judge for the Whitbread Prize and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.",
"Evans Starzinger\n 2007 National Outdoor Book Awards. It is the first time a sailing book has won the Literature prize. The announcement is on the NOBA website. Evans Starzinger and Beth Leonard are among the leading blue water cruising sailors today. During the 1990s they completed a circumnavigation aboard a Shannon 37' ketch, using the typical tropical route but including Cape Hope. During the 2000s they have taken a custom built Van De Stadt designed 47' aluminum fractional sloop on a second circumnavigation, above the Arctic Circle and around all five great capes - Cape Horn, Cape of Good Hope, Cape Leeuwin, South West Cape, Tasmania, and South ",
"John Rousmaniere\n John Rousmaniere is an American writer and author of 30 historical. technical, and instructional books on sailing, yachting history, New York history, business history, and the histories of clubs, businesses, and other organizations. An authority on seamanship and boating safety, he has conducted tests of equipment and sailing skills, and led or participated in fact-finding inquiries into boating accidents. He has been presented with several awards for his writing and his contributions to boating safety and seamanship.",
"Brian M. Fagan\n An avid sailor since childhood, Fagan wrote sailing guides to many locations on the Pacific coast of the United States and published them under his own imprint. Now retired from UC Santa Barbara, he lives in the Santa Barbara area with his wife, one of his two daughters, and numerous cats and rabbits.",
"Dick Tillman\n He wrote The Complete Book of Laser Sailing, published by McGraw Hill in 2005.",
"Nathaniel Philbrick\n After graduate school, Philbrick worked for four years as an editor at Sailing World magazine. He then worked as a freelancer for a number of years, during which time he was the primary caregiver for his two children while writing and editing several books about sailing, including The Passionate Sailor, Second Wind, and Yaahting: A Parody. In 1986, Philbrick moved to Nantucket with his wife Melissa and their two children. In 1994, he published his first book about the island’s history, Away Off Shore, followed in 1998 by a study of the Nantucket’s native legacy, Abram’s Eyes. He is the founding director of Nantucket’s Egan Maritime Institute and is a research fellow at the Nantucket Historical Association.",
"Bill Robinson (author)\n William Wheeler Robinson (October 4, 1918 – April 3, 2007) was an American sailor, author and editor well known in the national and international sailing community for his 27 nautical books, speaking engagements, and contributions to nautical publications. Robinson was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and attended Princeton University from 1935 to 1939, graduating with a degree in English. He received a commission in the United States Naval Reserve in 1941 and served as an officer until 1945. He commanded a 110-foot wooden Navy subchaser - hull number SC 743 - in the Pacific theater during World War II - ",
"William H. White (maritime writer)\n William H. White is an American writer specializing in historical novels relating to the age of sail.",
"Clare Francis\n After writing three accounts of her experiences while sailing, she turned to fiction and is the author of eight best-sellers.",
"Chris Eakin\n He wrote the book \"A Race Too Far\" which describes the 1968 sailing race to be the first person to sail non-stop round the world single-handed.",
"List of sailors\nJohn Arthur Barry, Australian journalist and author ; Peter Baynham, Welsh screenwriter; Academy Award-nominated; co-writer of Borat ; John Blackburn, British novelist ; Nathaniel Bowditch, author, The American Practical Navigator ; E. S. Campbell, American author, broadcaster and radio officer ; A. Bertram Chandler, Australian science fiction author of over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction ; Brian Cleeve, English writer and popular TV broadcaster ; Richard Henry Dana Jr., American author, Two Years Before the Mast ; Clare Francis, British novelist ; Allen Ginsberg, poet, \"Howl\", \"Kaddish\" ; David Hackworth, retired United States Army colonel and military journalist ; John L. Hess, American journalist ; Herbert Huncke, American beat generation ",
"Eric and Susan Hiscock\n Eric Charles Hiscock (14 March 1908 – 15 September 1986) was a British sailor and author of books on small boat sailing and ocean cruising. Together with his wife and crew Susan Oakes Hiscock (née Sclater, 18 May 1913 – 12 May 1995), he authored numerous accounts of their short cruises and world circumnavigations, accomplished over several decades. His works also include several technical how-to books on sailing and ocean cruising and a film made on board Wanderer III entitled Beyond The West Horizon.",
"Barry Gifford\n Barry Gifford (born October 18, 1946) is an American author, poet, and screenwriter known for his distinctive mix of American landscapes and prose influenced by film noir and Beat Generation writers. Gifford is best known for his series of novels about Sailor and Lula, two star-crossed protagonists on a perpetual road trip. Published in seven novels between 1990 and 2015, the Sailor and Lula series is described by professor Andrei Codrescu as written in \"a great comic realist\" style that explores \"an unmistakably American universe [...] populated by a huge and lovable humanity propelled on a tragic river of excess energy.\" The first book of the ",
"Maritime history of the United Kingdom\n Britain has had many authors who wrote on marine topics, the sailing era being a popular period. Joseph Conrad, who was born in Poland in 1857, came to Britain in 1878 and was naturalised in 1886. He undertook a voyage in a collier and then a wool clipper, obtaining a master's ticket in 1887. His last voyage in 1916 was in a Q-ship during the war. Conrad wrote many stories based on his experiences, such as \"Lord Jim\". Basil Lubbock went out to the Klondike and then sailed back from San Francisco on a grain ship. From this he wrote \"Round the Horn before the Mast\" describing the life of an ordinary seaman. After settling down in England he collected facts on sailing ships and wrote books about them. Alan Villiers first sailed in a British square rigger and then in Danish ones. He bought a small Danish fully rigged ship and sailed around the world. After his return he wrote books about square riggers. Many works of fiction have also been written, perhaps the most famous being the series on Horatio Hornblower by C. S. Forester.",
"SAIL High School\n A 501c(3) nonprofit exists in the form of the SAIL High School Foundation, promoting alumni involvement in SAIL's future direction. Notable SAIL alumni include the fantasy author Jesse Bullington (also published as Alex Marshall).",
"Lawrence Sail\n Lawrence Sail (born 29 October 1942) is a contemporary British poet and writer."
] |
Who is the author of Fire? | [
"Alan Rodgers"
] | author | Fire (Rodgers novel) | 4,109,854 | 62 | [
{
"id": "31108028",
"title": "Fire (Rodgers novel)",
"text": " Fire is an apocalyptic science fiction/horror novel by Alan Rodgers, published in 1990 as an original paperback from Bantam Books. It was reprinted by specialty publisher Wildside Press in 2000.",
"score": "1.637028"
},
{
"id": "25465073",
"title": "Birth of Fire",
"text": " Birth of Fire is a science fiction novel by American writer Jerry Pournelle. It was first published by Laser Books in 1976, later published by Baen Books. It is related to the books Exiles to Glory and High Justice, and with those two, form a starting point for the CoDominium series.",
"score": "1.6367462"
},
{
"id": "25593622",
"title": "Charlie Johnson in the Flames",
"text": " At the time of publication, author Michael Ignatieff was 56 years old and the director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University. He had previously written numerous non-fiction books, including Empire Lite: Nation-Building in Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan and The Lesser Evil - Political Ethics in an Age of Terror (for the Gifford Lectures) which were both published in 2003 along with Charlie Johnson in the Flames. Ignatieff had written two previous novels, Asya in 1991 and Scar Tissue in 1993, which was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize.",
"score": "1.6181219"
},
{
"id": "8023497",
"title": "Fire Pattern",
"text": " Fire Pattern is a novel by Bob Shaw published in 1984.",
"score": "1.6146964"
},
{
"id": "27614816",
"title": "Fire (Cashore novel)",
"text": " Fire is a fantasy novel by Kristin Cashore, a companion book to her debut novel, Graceling. It tells the story of a young monster in the shape of a human who is hated because of her difference and supernatural abilities. The novel debuted at number four on The New York Times Best Seller list and won several awards.",
"score": "1.6046416"
},
{
"id": "27726509",
"title": "Planet on Fire",
"text": " At the time of the book's publication, both authors worked for think tanks, with Mathew Lawrence at Common Wealth and Laurie Laybourn-Langton at the Institute for Public Policy Research.",
"score": "1.6022503"
},
{
"id": "3052784",
"title": "Charles Gramlich",
"text": "Write With Fire, Borgo Press, 2009. ; Writing in Psychology, (With Y. Du Bois Irvin & Elliott Hammer), Borgo Press. ",
"score": "1.5957446"
},
{
"id": "31746366",
"title": "Fire Study",
"text": " Fire Study is a 2008 fantasy novel written by Maria V. Snyder. Fire Study is the third and final book in a three book series.",
"score": "1.5915811"
},
{
"id": "31108030",
"title": "Fire (Rodgers novel)",
"text": " Graham Masterton and J. Michael Straczynski both praised the book at the time of publication, with Straczynski describing it as a mix of \"Biblical prophecies, high-tech, and ancient horrors\".",
"score": "1.5873431"
},
{
"id": "32007724",
"title": "The Fire (novel)",
"text": " The Fire, published in 2008, is a novel by American author Katherine Neville. It is an adventure/quest novel which is a sequel to her debut novel The Eight. The main character, Alexandra Solarin (daughter of Catherine Velis), must enter into a cryptic world of danger and conspiracy in order to recover the pieces of the Montglane Service, a legendary chess set once owned by Charlemagne. The novel contains several repeated elements from The Eight and was a New York Times Bestseller for six months.",
"score": "1.5866416"
},
{
"id": "14542721",
"title": "The Fire This Time (book)",
"text": " The book was published by Scribner on August 2, 2016.",
"score": "1.5845662"
},
{
"id": "30720136",
"title": "Stephen J. Pyne",
"text": " Since the publication of his second book, Fire in America in 1982, he has been known as one of the world's foremost experts on the history and management of fire. He has written big-screen fire histories for Australia, Canada, Europe (including Russia), and Earth overall, as well as essays on other lands. He has written or co-authored three textbooks on landscape fire and its management. Recently, he has completed a new survey of the American fire scene with Between Two Fires: A Fire History of Contemporary America, a narrative play-by-play, and a suite of nine regional reconnaissances under the collective title To the ",
"score": "1.5755861"
},
{
"id": "26508511",
"title": "Green Fire (novel)",
"text": " Green Fire is a science fiction novel by American writer John Taine (pseudonym of Eric Temple Bell). It was first published in 1928 by E. P. Dutton. The novel was adapted and produced as a play.",
"score": "1.571552"
},
{
"id": "6452060",
"title": "Diana Palmer (author)",
"text": "Fire Brand (1989) ",
"score": "1.5670464"
},
{
"id": "32007727",
"title": "The Fire (novel)",
"text": " The Fire received rave reviews, spending more than 6 months on bestseller lists around the world, including France, Spain, Holland, New York, Denver, Seattle, San Francisco, and DC. The Washington Post called the novel “[An] exotic, labyrinthine conspiracy tale. . . the perfect escapist adventure.” The Chicago Sun-Times stated, \"Katherine Neville’s follow up to The Eight, a cult classic that impressed many readers as a more intelligent and literary precursor to Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code. . . The Fire impresses as much for its literary aspects as it does for its action, puzzles and suspense . . . This is a book to be savored as it’s read, and admired for the beauty of its accomplishment.” In 2009 Neville was awarded the prestigious Silver Nautilus Book Award for Visionary Fiction for her novel, The Fire.",
"score": "1.5635726"
},
{
"id": "8938351",
"title": "Fire and Fame",
"text": " him, resulting in weeks and months of reflection, and the final decision to write his memoirs. Deisinger outlined his idea for the project to Begai in early 2005, mapping out plans for English and German versions of the as-yet-untitled book. Deisinger made it clear from the beginning that Begai would not be a ghost writer, but play an active role in shaping the story. Over a two-year period the pair got together as schedules allowed, with Deisinger dictating the text to Begai in German, who would then translate, arrange and trim the story in English, adding facts and information when necessary. Thus, the book was a genuine collaboration and not a regurgitation of Deisinger’s words. Fire ",
"score": "1.5586017"
},
{
"id": "11381920",
"title": "Luis Gabriel Aguilera",
"text": " Aguilera is author of a memoir, Gabriel's Fire, published by The University of Chicago Press in April 2000. He has also written on topics like the Iraq War and education matters for Chicago's Spanish-English Extra Bilingual Community newspaper; has written for electronic dance music Zines; and has self-published an essay on corruption in public education.",
"score": "1.5572199"
},
{
"id": "3760112",
"title": "White Fire (novel)",
"text": " White Fire is a thriller novel by American writers Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. It was released on November 12, 2013 by Grand Central Publishing. This is the thirteenth book in the Special Agent Pendergast series. The preceding novel is Two Graves.",
"score": "1.546229"
},
{
"id": "13690158",
"title": "James Rollins",
"text": " Czajkowski sold his first novel, Witch Fire (1999), under the pen name James Clemens, through Terry Brooks' publisher. Brooks had been one of the judges for a writing contest at the Maui Writers' Conference in Maui, Hawaii, in which James had entered a manuscript he had recently completed.",
"score": "1.5454895"
},
{
"id": "15156575",
"title": "Child of Fire",
"text": " Child of Fire is a 2009 urban fantasy novel by Harry Connolly. It was first published by Del Rey Books.",
"score": "1.5442054"
}
] | [
"Fire (Rodgers novel)\n Fire is an apocalyptic science fiction/horror novel by Alan Rodgers, published in 1990 as an original paperback from Bantam Books. It was reprinted by specialty publisher Wildside Press in 2000.",
"Birth of Fire\n Birth of Fire is a science fiction novel by American writer Jerry Pournelle. It was first published by Laser Books in 1976, later published by Baen Books. It is related to the books Exiles to Glory and High Justice, and with those two, form a starting point for the CoDominium series.",
"Charlie Johnson in the Flames\n At the time of publication, author Michael Ignatieff was 56 years old and the director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University. He had previously written numerous non-fiction books, including Empire Lite: Nation-Building in Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan and The Lesser Evil - Political Ethics in an Age of Terror (for the Gifford Lectures) which were both published in 2003 along with Charlie Johnson in the Flames. Ignatieff had written two previous novels, Asya in 1991 and Scar Tissue in 1993, which was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize.",
"Fire Pattern\n Fire Pattern is a novel by Bob Shaw published in 1984.",
"Fire (Cashore novel)\n Fire is a fantasy novel by Kristin Cashore, a companion book to her debut novel, Graceling. It tells the story of a young monster in the shape of a human who is hated because of her difference and supernatural abilities. The novel debuted at number four on The New York Times Best Seller list and won several awards.",
"Planet on Fire\n At the time of the book's publication, both authors worked for think tanks, with Mathew Lawrence at Common Wealth and Laurie Laybourn-Langton at the Institute for Public Policy Research.",
"Charles Gramlich\nWrite With Fire, Borgo Press, 2009. ; Writing in Psychology, (With Y. Du Bois Irvin & Elliott Hammer), Borgo Press. ",
"Fire Study\n Fire Study is a 2008 fantasy novel written by Maria V. Snyder. Fire Study is the third and final book in a three book series.",
"Fire (Rodgers novel)\n Graham Masterton and J. Michael Straczynski both praised the book at the time of publication, with Straczynski describing it as a mix of \"Biblical prophecies, high-tech, and ancient horrors\".",
"The Fire (novel)\n The Fire, published in 2008, is a novel by American author Katherine Neville. It is an adventure/quest novel which is a sequel to her debut novel The Eight. The main character, Alexandra Solarin (daughter of Catherine Velis), must enter into a cryptic world of danger and conspiracy in order to recover the pieces of the Montglane Service, a legendary chess set once owned by Charlemagne. The novel contains several repeated elements from The Eight and was a New York Times Bestseller for six months.",
"The Fire This Time (book)\n The book was published by Scribner on August 2, 2016.",
"Stephen J. Pyne\n Since the publication of his second book, Fire in America in 1982, he has been known as one of the world's foremost experts on the history and management of fire. He has written big-screen fire histories for Australia, Canada, Europe (including Russia), and Earth overall, as well as essays on other lands. He has written or co-authored three textbooks on landscape fire and its management. Recently, he has completed a new survey of the American fire scene with Between Two Fires: A Fire History of Contemporary America, a narrative play-by-play, and a suite of nine regional reconnaissances under the collective title To the ",
"Green Fire (novel)\n Green Fire is a science fiction novel by American writer John Taine (pseudonym of Eric Temple Bell). It was first published in 1928 by E. P. Dutton. The novel was adapted and produced as a play.",
"Diana Palmer (author)\nFire Brand (1989) ",
"The Fire (novel)\n The Fire received rave reviews, spending more than 6 months on bestseller lists around the world, including France, Spain, Holland, New York, Denver, Seattle, San Francisco, and DC. The Washington Post called the novel “[An] exotic, labyrinthine conspiracy tale. . . the perfect escapist adventure.” The Chicago Sun-Times stated, \"Katherine Neville’s follow up to The Eight, a cult classic that impressed many readers as a more intelligent and literary precursor to Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code. . . The Fire impresses as much for its literary aspects as it does for its action, puzzles and suspense . . . This is a book to be savored as it’s read, and admired for the beauty of its accomplishment.” In 2009 Neville was awarded the prestigious Silver Nautilus Book Award for Visionary Fiction for her novel, The Fire.",
"Fire and Fame\n him, resulting in weeks and months of reflection, and the final decision to write his memoirs. Deisinger outlined his idea for the project to Begai in early 2005, mapping out plans for English and German versions of the as-yet-untitled book. Deisinger made it clear from the beginning that Begai would not be a ghost writer, but play an active role in shaping the story. Over a two-year period the pair got together as schedules allowed, with Deisinger dictating the text to Begai in German, who would then translate, arrange and trim the story in English, adding facts and information when necessary. Thus, the book was a genuine collaboration and not a regurgitation of Deisinger’s words. Fire ",
"Luis Gabriel Aguilera\n Aguilera is author of a memoir, Gabriel's Fire, published by The University of Chicago Press in April 2000. He has also written on topics like the Iraq War and education matters for Chicago's Spanish-English Extra Bilingual Community newspaper; has written for electronic dance music Zines; and has self-published an essay on corruption in public education.",
"White Fire (novel)\n White Fire is a thriller novel by American writers Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. It was released on November 12, 2013 by Grand Central Publishing. This is the thirteenth book in the Special Agent Pendergast series. The preceding novel is Two Graves.",
"James Rollins\n Czajkowski sold his first novel, Witch Fire (1999), under the pen name James Clemens, through Terry Brooks' publisher. Brooks had been one of the judges for a writing contest at the Maui Writers' Conference in Maui, Hawaii, in which James had entered a manuscript he had recently completed.",
"Child of Fire\n Child of Fire is a 2009 urban fantasy novel by Harry Connolly. It was first published by Del Rey Books."
] |
Who is the author of Carnival of Souls? | [
"Melissa Marr",
"M. A. Marr",
"Melissa A Marr"
] | author | Untamed City: Carnival of Secrets | 668,466 | 69 | [
{
"id": "6492249",
"title": "Untamed City: Carnival of Secrets",
"text": " Untamed City: Carnival of Secrets, formerly published as Carnival of Souls is a young adult fantasy novel by author Melissa Marr. It was published by HarperTeen, a division of HarperCollins, in September 2012. Marr has stated that there will be at least one sequel to the book.",
"score": "1.677042"
},
{
"id": "2661467",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)",
"text": " Carnival of Souls is an original novel based on the U.S. television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.",
"score": "1.6043483"
},
{
"id": "2661471",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)",
"text": "Ifmagazine.com - Review of this book ; Shadowcat.name - Review of this book ",
"score": "1.5822403"
},
{
"id": "6478612",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (1998 film)",
"text": " Carnival of Souls (also billed as Wes Craven Presents 'Carnival of Souls') is a 1998 American horror film, a remake of Herk Harvey's 1962 horror film of the same name, although it has very little in common with the story of the original. It stars Bobbie Phillips and comedian Larry Miller, and was directed by Adam Grossman and Ian Kessner. It was executive produced by Wes Craven.",
"score": "1.5771544"
},
{
"id": "175194",
"title": "Carnival of Souls",
"text": " Carnival of Souls is a 1962 American independent horror film produced and directed by Herk Harvey and written by John Clifford from a story by Clifford and Harvey, and starring Candace Hilligoss. Its plot follows Mary Henry, a young woman whose life is disturbed after a car accident. She relocates to a new city, where she finds herself unable to assimilate with the locals, and becomes drawn to the pavilion of an abandoned carnival. Director Harvey also appears in the film as a ghoulish stranger who stalks her throughout. Filmed in Lawrence, Kansas, and Salt Lake City, Carnival of Souls was shot on a ",
"score": "1.550503"
},
{
"id": "175217",
"title": "Carnival of Souls",
"text": " named as a precursor to the works of various filmmakers, including David Lynch, George A. Romero, Lucrecia Martel and James Wan. The film was used for a RiffTrax Live event in October 2016, where former Mystery Science Theater 3000 cast members Bill Corbett, Kevin Murphy and Michael J. Nelson riffed the film for a live audience and broadcast to other theaters through NCM Fathom. Rifftrax's website offers the video downloads of the live performance as well as a studio-recorded riff of the film. A novelization of the film titled Nightmare Pavilion written by Andrew J. Rausch was released by Happy Cloud Media in October 2020.",
"score": "1.5502708"
},
{
"id": "2661470",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)",
"text": " Buffy novels, such as this one are considered by most fans to not be part of Buffyverse canon. They are not considered as official Buffyverse reality, but are novels from the authors' imaginations. However unlike fanfic, 'overviews' summarising their story, written early in the writing process, were 'approved' by both Fox and Whedon (or his office), and the books were therefore later published as official Buffy merchandise.",
"score": "1.5224833"
},
{
"id": "175218",
"title": "Carnival of Souls",
"text": " Negotiations with the writer of Carnival of Souls, John Clifford, and the director Herk Harvey led in 1998 to a remake directed by Adam Grossman and Ian Kessner and starring Bobbie Phillips. The remake has little in common with the 1962 film, borrowing little more than the revelation at the end. Sidney Berger, who had appeared in the original film as John Linden, appeared in a cameo in the remake. The remake followed the story of a young woman (Phillips) and her confrontation with her mother's murderer. The filmmakers had asked for Candace Hilligoss, the star of the first film, to also appear, but she declined, feeling that Clifford and the filmmakers of the remake had shown disrespect to her in initiating the film without consulting her or considering her treatment for a sequel to the 1962 version. The remake was marketed as Wes Craven Presents 'Carnival of Souls. It received negative appraisals from most reviewers and did not manage to secure theatrical release, going direct-to-video. An unofficial remake of Carnival of Souls was released in 2008 under the title Yella, directed by Christian Petzold. This film is based loosely on the original.",
"score": "1.5124952"
},
{
"id": "5331978",
"title": "Carnival (Mackenzie novel)",
"text": " Carnival is a 1912 novel by the British writer Compton Mackenzie. A London ballet dancer falls in love with an aristocrat, but refuses to become his mistress and instead marries a Cornish farmer with ultimately tragic consequences. It was a commercial and critical success on its release.",
"score": "1.5122972"
},
{
"id": "2661468",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)",
"text": " A traveling carnival arrives in Sunnydale. It seems the carnival might be another victim of Sunnydale's weirdness. Nobody seems to be able to remember it arriving despite the many old-style wagons, the numerous performers, and horse-drawn carts. The creepy calliope music seems almost to beckon out to people. Also nobody who goes into Hall of Mirrors comes out exactly the same as they were to start with. Inspired by a pair of once-homely twins now parading around the school like divas, the Scoobs decide to investigate the carnival. It's soon clear that entering comes at a cost above the price of admission. Willow becomes consumed by envy, Cordelia gets greedy, and Xander finds himself overtaken with gluttony. Angel is revealing a dangerous new persona, whilst anger rises in Rupert Giles. More serious still, Buffy's pride starts to threaten those she cares about.",
"score": "1.5094885"
},
{
"id": "6478616",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (1998 film)",
"text": " The film was released on DVD by Lions Gate on February 23, 1999. It was later released by VCI on January 15, 2001 and by Cinema Club on December 31st that same year.",
"score": "1.4958515"
},
{
"id": "175202",
"title": "Carnival of Souls",
"text": " Harvey was a director and producer of industrial and educational films based in Lawrence, Kansas, where he worked for the Centron Corporation. While returning to Kansas after shooting a Centron film in California, Harvey developed the idea for Carnival of Souls after driving past the abandoned Saltair Pavilion in Salt Lake City. \"When I got back to Lawrence, I asked my friend and co-worker at Centron Films, John Clifford, who was a writer there, how he'd like to write a feature,\" Harvey recalled. \"The last scene, I told him, had to be a whole bunch of ghouls dancing in that ballroom; the rest was up to him. He wrote it in three weeks.\"",
"score": "1.4937997"
},
{
"id": "30574272",
"title": "Don't Stop the Carnival (novel)",
"text": " Don't Stop the Carnival is a 1965 novel by American writer Herman Wouk. It is a comedy about escaping middle-age crisis to the Caribbean, a heaven that quickly turns into a hell for the main character. The novel was turned into a short-lived musical and later, album by Jimmy Buffett in 1997.",
"score": "1.4890364"
},
{
"id": "175220",
"title": "Carnival of Souls",
"text": "Introduction to Carnival of Souls an essay by John Clifford at the Criterion Collection ; Carnival of Souls an essay by Bruce Kawin at the Criterion Collection ",
"score": "1.484607"
},
{
"id": "6478617",
"title": "Carnival of Souls (1998 film)",
"text": " On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 20% based on 5 reviews, with a weighted average rating of 4.1/10. Shawn Handling from HorrorNews.net stated that, although the film was \"a decent little fright picture\" and its style made up for its lack of originality, Handling criticized the film's \"run-of the-mill\" performances, writing, predictable story, lack of scares, and choice of music. TV Guide awarded the film 1/5 stars, calling the film \"dismal\", writing, \"Though filled with modern-day horror contrivances, Grossman's film evokes none of the haunting atmosphere that distinguished Herk Harvey's eerily timeless original.\"",
"score": "1.4715879"
},
{
"id": "15299825",
"title": "Candace Hilligoss",
"text": " She is best known for her portrayal of Mary Henry, a church organist haunted by specters, in Carnival of Souls (1962), a low-budget horror film that has developed a cult following. She had been offered a role in the Richard Hilliard-directed horror film Psychomania (1963), but opted for the role in Carnival of Souls. She stated that at the time, she took the role as a \"take-the-money-and-run type of situation\"; she was paid approximately $2,000 for her work in the film. She also appeared in a supporting role in the horror film The Curse of the Living Corpse (1964), which was shot in Stamford, Connecticut, while Hilligoss was living in New York. In 1997, she was asked to appear in the remake of Carnival of Souls, but declined. Hilligoss was married to actor Nicolas Coster, with whom she had two daughters, Candace and Dinneen. They divorced in 1981. As of 1990, Hilligoss lived in Beverly Hills, California. Her self-published memoir The Odyssey and the Idiocy – Marriage to an Actor was published in 2017.",
"score": "1.4706638"
},
{
"id": "2234347",
"title": "Carnival (Antoni novel)",
"text": " Carnival by Robert Antoni is a 2005 reworking of Ernest Hemingway's novel The Sun Also Rises. Though Antoni does draw heavily from the activities of the characters from The Sun Also Rises, Carnival describes the sense of displacement and illusion experienced by the characters who have exiled themselves from their island in the West Indies. The main character, William Fletcher, has a similar wound to Jake Barnes from The Sun Also Rises but William's wound is a self-imposed one. Though they both cannot use their penises, Jake still has the intense passion to be with women but is unable because of ",
"score": "1.4610437"
},
{
"id": "11431513",
"title": "The Country of Carnival",
"text": " The Country of Carnival (Portuguese: O País do Carnaval) is a Brazilian novel. It was written by Jorge Amado in 1931. In this debut novel, the themes that would come to permeate the author's work can already be seen, albeit in an embryonic form. The book is an account of the typical Brazilian intelligentsia of the 1920s. It has not been translated into English.",
"score": "1.4588926"
},
{
"id": "32558918",
"title": "JG Faherty",
"text": " continues to operate it, along with its sister company, Million Dollar Resumes. In 2002, he began writing short horror and science fiction. His first novel, Carnival of Fear, was published in 2010 by Graveside Tales. In 2011, his second novel, Ghosts of Coronado Bay, was published by JournalStone Books and later nominated for a Bram Stoker Award® for Superior Achievement in YA Horror. In 2012, as the Horror Writers Association's Library Liaison and founder of their YA Literacy and Library programs, Faherty initiated literacy initiatives with several library organizations and established a partnership with Ray Billingsley, creator of the Curtis ",
"score": "1.4571149"
},
{
"id": "10836502",
"title": "Carnival of Lost Souls",
"text": " Carnival of Lost Souls is the fifth album by Dark ambient musical duo Nox Arcana, loosely based on the novel Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. On this album, Nox Arcana performs a style of music that is indicative of late 19th-early 20th century circus or Vaudeville act, albeit with a darker, more sinister tone and effect. In 2017, Carnival Of Lost Souls was ranked by Pretty Famous on MSN at #101 for Best Album of All Time. Nox Arcana made the list with other influential musical artists including The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, and The Ramones.",
"score": "1.4530303"
}
] | [
"Untamed City: Carnival of Secrets\n Untamed City: Carnival of Secrets, formerly published as Carnival of Souls is a young adult fantasy novel by author Melissa Marr. It was published by HarperTeen, a division of HarperCollins, in September 2012. Marr has stated that there will be at least one sequel to the book.",
"Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)\n Carnival of Souls is an original novel based on the U.S. television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.",
"Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)\nIfmagazine.com - Review of this book ; Shadowcat.name - Review of this book ",
"Carnival of Souls (1998 film)\n Carnival of Souls (also billed as Wes Craven Presents 'Carnival of Souls') is a 1998 American horror film, a remake of Herk Harvey's 1962 horror film of the same name, although it has very little in common with the story of the original. It stars Bobbie Phillips and comedian Larry Miller, and was directed by Adam Grossman and Ian Kessner. It was executive produced by Wes Craven.",
"Carnival of Souls\n Carnival of Souls is a 1962 American independent horror film produced and directed by Herk Harvey and written by John Clifford from a story by Clifford and Harvey, and starring Candace Hilligoss. Its plot follows Mary Henry, a young woman whose life is disturbed after a car accident. She relocates to a new city, where she finds herself unable to assimilate with the locals, and becomes drawn to the pavilion of an abandoned carnival. Director Harvey also appears in the film as a ghoulish stranger who stalks her throughout. Filmed in Lawrence, Kansas, and Salt Lake City, Carnival of Souls was shot on a ",
"Carnival of Souls\n named as a precursor to the works of various filmmakers, including David Lynch, George A. Romero, Lucrecia Martel and James Wan. The film was used for a RiffTrax Live event in October 2016, where former Mystery Science Theater 3000 cast members Bill Corbett, Kevin Murphy and Michael J. Nelson riffed the film for a live audience and broadcast to other theaters through NCM Fathom. Rifftrax's website offers the video downloads of the live performance as well as a studio-recorded riff of the film. A novelization of the film titled Nightmare Pavilion written by Andrew J. Rausch was released by Happy Cloud Media in October 2020.",
"Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)\n Buffy novels, such as this one are considered by most fans to not be part of Buffyverse canon. They are not considered as official Buffyverse reality, but are novels from the authors' imaginations. However unlike fanfic, 'overviews' summarising their story, written early in the writing process, were 'approved' by both Fox and Whedon (or his office), and the books were therefore later published as official Buffy merchandise.",
"Carnival of Souls\n Negotiations with the writer of Carnival of Souls, John Clifford, and the director Herk Harvey led in 1998 to a remake directed by Adam Grossman and Ian Kessner and starring Bobbie Phillips. The remake has little in common with the 1962 film, borrowing little more than the revelation at the end. Sidney Berger, who had appeared in the original film as John Linden, appeared in a cameo in the remake. The remake followed the story of a young woman (Phillips) and her confrontation with her mother's murderer. The filmmakers had asked for Candace Hilligoss, the star of the first film, to also appear, but she declined, feeling that Clifford and the filmmakers of the remake had shown disrespect to her in initiating the film without consulting her or considering her treatment for a sequel to the 1962 version. The remake was marketed as Wes Craven Presents 'Carnival of Souls. It received negative appraisals from most reviewers and did not manage to secure theatrical release, going direct-to-video. An unofficial remake of Carnival of Souls was released in 2008 under the title Yella, directed by Christian Petzold. This film is based loosely on the original.",
"Carnival (Mackenzie novel)\n Carnival is a 1912 novel by the British writer Compton Mackenzie. A London ballet dancer falls in love with an aristocrat, but refuses to become his mistress and instead marries a Cornish farmer with ultimately tragic consequences. It was a commercial and critical success on its release.",
"Carnival of Souls (Buffy novel)\n A traveling carnival arrives in Sunnydale. It seems the carnival might be another victim of Sunnydale's weirdness. Nobody seems to be able to remember it arriving despite the many old-style wagons, the numerous performers, and horse-drawn carts. The creepy calliope music seems almost to beckon out to people. Also nobody who goes into Hall of Mirrors comes out exactly the same as they were to start with. Inspired by a pair of once-homely twins now parading around the school like divas, the Scoobs decide to investigate the carnival. It's soon clear that entering comes at a cost above the price of admission. Willow becomes consumed by envy, Cordelia gets greedy, and Xander finds himself overtaken with gluttony. Angel is revealing a dangerous new persona, whilst anger rises in Rupert Giles. More serious still, Buffy's pride starts to threaten those she cares about.",
"Carnival of Souls (1998 film)\n The film was released on DVD by Lions Gate on February 23, 1999. It was later released by VCI on January 15, 2001 and by Cinema Club on December 31st that same year.",
"Carnival of Souls\n Harvey was a director and producer of industrial and educational films based in Lawrence, Kansas, where he worked for the Centron Corporation. While returning to Kansas after shooting a Centron film in California, Harvey developed the idea for Carnival of Souls after driving past the abandoned Saltair Pavilion in Salt Lake City. \"When I got back to Lawrence, I asked my friend and co-worker at Centron Films, John Clifford, who was a writer there, how he'd like to write a feature,\" Harvey recalled. \"The last scene, I told him, had to be a whole bunch of ghouls dancing in that ballroom; the rest was up to him. He wrote it in three weeks.\"",
"Don't Stop the Carnival (novel)\n Don't Stop the Carnival is a 1965 novel by American writer Herman Wouk. It is a comedy about escaping middle-age crisis to the Caribbean, a heaven that quickly turns into a hell for the main character. The novel was turned into a short-lived musical and later, album by Jimmy Buffett in 1997.",
"Carnival of Souls\nIntroduction to Carnival of Souls an essay by John Clifford at the Criterion Collection ; Carnival of Souls an essay by Bruce Kawin at the Criterion Collection ",
"Carnival of Souls (1998 film)\n On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 20% based on 5 reviews, with a weighted average rating of 4.1/10. Shawn Handling from HorrorNews.net stated that, although the film was \"a decent little fright picture\" and its style made up for its lack of originality, Handling criticized the film's \"run-of the-mill\" performances, writing, predictable story, lack of scares, and choice of music. TV Guide awarded the film 1/5 stars, calling the film \"dismal\", writing, \"Though filled with modern-day horror contrivances, Grossman's film evokes none of the haunting atmosphere that distinguished Herk Harvey's eerily timeless original.\"",
"Candace Hilligoss\n She is best known for her portrayal of Mary Henry, a church organist haunted by specters, in Carnival of Souls (1962), a low-budget horror film that has developed a cult following. She had been offered a role in the Richard Hilliard-directed horror film Psychomania (1963), but opted for the role in Carnival of Souls. She stated that at the time, she took the role as a \"take-the-money-and-run type of situation\"; she was paid approximately $2,000 for her work in the film. She also appeared in a supporting role in the horror film The Curse of the Living Corpse (1964), which was shot in Stamford, Connecticut, while Hilligoss was living in New York. In 1997, she was asked to appear in the remake of Carnival of Souls, but declined. Hilligoss was married to actor Nicolas Coster, with whom she had two daughters, Candace and Dinneen. They divorced in 1981. As of 1990, Hilligoss lived in Beverly Hills, California. Her self-published memoir The Odyssey and the Idiocy – Marriage to an Actor was published in 2017.",
"Carnival (Antoni novel)\n Carnival by Robert Antoni is a 2005 reworking of Ernest Hemingway's novel The Sun Also Rises. Though Antoni does draw heavily from the activities of the characters from The Sun Also Rises, Carnival describes the sense of displacement and illusion experienced by the characters who have exiled themselves from their island in the West Indies. The main character, William Fletcher, has a similar wound to Jake Barnes from The Sun Also Rises but William's wound is a self-imposed one. Though they both cannot use their penises, Jake still has the intense passion to be with women but is unable because of ",
"The Country of Carnival\n The Country of Carnival (Portuguese: O País do Carnaval) is a Brazilian novel. It was written by Jorge Amado in 1931. In this debut novel, the themes that would come to permeate the author's work can already be seen, albeit in an embryonic form. The book is an account of the typical Brazilian intelligentsia of the 1920s. It has not been translated into English.",
"JG Faherty\n continues to operate it, along with its sister company, Million Dollar Resumes. In 2002, he began writing short horror and science fiction. His first novel, Carnival of Fear, was published in 2010 by Graveside Tales. In 2011, his second novel, Ghosts of Coronado Bay, was published by JournalStone Books and later nominated for a Bram Stoker Award® for Superior Achievement in YA Horror. In 2012, as the Horror Writers Association's Library Liaison and founder of their YA Literacy and Library programs, Faherty initiated literacy initiatives with several library organizations and established a partnership with Ray Billingsley, creator of the Curtis ",
"Carnival of Lost Souls\n Carnival of Lost Souls is the fifth album by Dark ambient musical duo Nox Arcana, loosely based on the novel Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. On this album, Nox Arcana performs a style of music that is indicative of late 19th-early 20th century circus or Vaudeville act, albeit with a darker, more sinister tone and effect. In 2017, Carnival Of Lost Souls was ranked by Pretty Famous on MSN at #101 for Best Album of All Time. Nox Arcana made the list with other influential musical artists including The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, and The Ramones."
] |
Who is the author of Mannfolk? | [
"Arne Garborg"
] | author | Mannfolk | 5,069,647 | 51 | [
{
"id": "3371463",
"title": "Catherine Mann",
"text": " Catherine Mann is an American author of romance fiction. She has published numerous books with Berkley, Sourcebooks, and Harlequin Desire. In 2003 Mann won the \"Best Contemporary\" RITA Award for Taking Cover. She has also won a Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award, a Booksellers' Best Award, and celebrated six RITA Award finals. Mann holds a master's degree in Theater from UNC-Greensboro and a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from the College of Charleston.",
"score": "1.5299373"
},
{
"id": "24954137",
"title": "Charles C. Mann",
"text": " Mann has written for Fortune, The New York Times, Smithsonian, Technology Review, Vanity Fair, and The Washington Post. In 2005 he wrote 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, followed in 2011 by 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. He served as a judge for the PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award in 2012. He is a three-time National Magazine Award finalist and a recipient of writing awards from the American Bar Association, the American Institute of Physics, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and the Lannan Foundation. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts with his wife and children. In 2018, Mann published The Wizard and the Prophet, which details two competing theories about the future of agriculture, population, and the environment. The titular \"wizard\" Mann refers to is Norman Borlaug, the Nobel Peace Prize winner credited with developing the Green Revolution and saving one billion people from starvation. Mann refers to William Vogt, an early proponent of population control, as the \"prophet\".",
"score": "1.5251774"
},
{
"id": "28158747",
"title": "Nicholas Mann (occult writer)",
"text": " Nicholas R. Mann (born 1952) is the author of books on geomancy, mythology, the Celtic tradition, sacred geometry and, most recently, archaeoastronomy. Glastonbury, England, Avebury, England, Sedona, Arizona (USA) and Washington, DC (USA) are all locations which feature in his work. His book Druid Magic: The Practice of Celtic Wisdom, co-written with Maya Sutton, PhD, has been described by the British Druid Order as\"One of the best practical guides available...\" He is also an illustrator, producing the images for the Silver Branch Cards, a Celtic divination deck of his own design. He was born in Sussex, England. He lives in Somerset, England with his partner Philippa Glasson, with whom he co-authored The Star Temple of Avalon: Glastonbury's Ancient Observatory Revealed.",
"score": "1.5244656"
},
{
"id": "4146204",
"title": "Phillip Mann",
"text": " and writing some plays and children's literature, in 2013 he published his first novel since 1996, The Disestablishment of Paradise. This is about the corruption by mankind of a pristine Earth-like planet called Paradise and subsequent banishment. In the 2017 New Year Honours, Mann was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature and drama. Mann divides his time between his home in Brooklyn, Wellington and a converted barn in the small town of Choussy in France's Loire Valley. He is now working on a new novel The Headman (a \"darkly comic novel\"), an anthology of short stories, and a work on theatre production.",
"score": "1.5202925"
},
{
"id": "13194431",
"title": "Perminder Mann",
"text": " After studying at Kingston University, Mann began her career in publishing working for trade publishers Macmillan and Transworld, before moving on to work with two international independent publishers, Hinkler and Phidal Publishing. She then spent time in the toy industry, before returning to publishing to work for Bonnier Publishing, which rebranded as Bonnier Books UK in 2018. During her time at Bonnier Books UK, she co-founded adult non-fiction imprint Blink Publishing. In 2014, the imprint became the first UK publisher to collaborate with a vlogger when it signed Alfie Deyes. Under Mann, Blink published The Pointless Book, which was a 2014 bestseller. In 2015 and 2016, Mann was named on The Booksellers list of the 100 most influential people in publishing. She was also on the awards list of the top 10 most influential ",
"score": "1.5197387"
},
{
"id": "13194430",
"title": "Perminder Mann",
"text": " Perminder Mann is the CEO of Bonnier Books UK, the sixth largest publisher in the UK with sales of over £80m. Mann is recognised as one of the UK's most powerful leaders and as a publishing innovator – one of the first to publish a social media influencer and for her work introducing inclusive workplace policy. Mann holds the position of Chair of the Publisher's Association Consumer Publishing Council, is a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a member of the advisory board for Kingston University's publishing program, and of the BBC100 steering group committee. She also appears annually in the UK's top 100 most influential people in book publishing, a list compiled by the industry's trade magazine, the Bookseller, and in 2015 was named as one of the top 10 most influential people in publishing and writing, at the prestigious Hospital Club h100 awards. Perminder Mann was the first CEO of a major publisher to announce the move to a full flexible working policy in 2020. Perminder is an advocate for inclusivity and collaboration in the workplace.",
"score": "1.5143713"
},
{
"id": "4144960",
"title": "Evelyn Juers",
"text": " Her book House of Exile (2008), subtitled The Life and Times of Heinrich Mann and Nelly Kroeger-Mann, is a collective biography. It is based on published sources, interviews and extensive archival research in Europe and America. House of Exile was shortlisted for the Victorian Premier's Award for Non-Fiction (Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-fiction), the West Australian Book Awards, the National Biography Award, and the ALS Gold Medal. In 2009 it won the Prime Minister's Literary Awards in the non-fiction category. House of Exile is published in the US by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, in the UK by Allen Lane /Penguin, in France (Chemins d’Exil) by Autrement, and in Spain ",
"score": "1.4815243"
},
{
"id": "29592752",
"title": "William J. Mann",
"text": " He got his start as a journalist at the now-defunct Hartford Monthly magazine. He freelanced for, among others, Architectural Digest, Connecticut magazine, Men's Fitness, Frontiers (Los Angeles), and The Boston Phoenix. He also wrote for and edited Metroline magazine, a gay-lesbian newsmagazine based in Hartford, Connecticut, before acting as publisher from 1992 to 1995. Mann's first novel, The Men From the Boys, was published by Dutton in 1997. He continued with a series of novels set in Provincetown, although he has also set his fiction in Palm Springs and Los Angeles. In addition, Mann has written the nonfiction books Wisecracker (1998), a ",
"score": "1.4789822"
},
{
"id": "4476946",
"title": "Stanley Mann",
"text": " Stanley Mann (August 8, 1928 – January 11, 2016) was a Canadian screenwriter. Born in Toronto, Ontario, he began his writing career in 1951 at CBC Radio, and was nominated for an Oscar for his work on the 1965 film The Collector, based on the John Fowles novel of the same title. He worked in many different genres, but his best known credits included the horror sequel Damien: Omen II, the literary adaptations A High Wind in Jamaica, Eye of the Needle and Firestarter, and the sword-and-sorcery film Conan the Destroyer. He was married to Florence Wood in the 1950s, while living and working in London, England. Following their divorce in 1959, Wood married novelist Mordecai Richler, who adopted Mann's son Daniel. He died on January 11, 2016.",
"score": "1.4707365"
},
{
"id": "1879970",
"title": "Manna (novel)",
"text": " Manna is a 2003 science fiction novel by Marshall Brain that explores several issues in modern information technology, automation and economics, as well as user interfaces and transhumanism.",
"score": "1.4693303"
},
{
"id": "11762910",
"title": "List of authors by name: M",
"text": " nf) • Charles Mangua (1939–2021, Kenya, f) • Bill Manhire (born 1946, N Zealand, p/f) • Rani Manicka (living, Malaysia, f) • John Manifold (1915–1985, Australia, p/nf) • Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st c. CE, Roman E, p) • Frederick Edward Maning (1812–1883, N Zealand, nf) • Irshad Manji (born 1968, Uganda/Canada, nf) • Henning Mankell (1948–2015, Sweden, f/ch/d) • Guy Mankowski (born 1983, England, f/nf) • Delarivier Manley (1663 or c. 1670–1724, England, nf/d) • Alana Mann (living, Australia, nf) • Erika Mann (1905–1969, Germany/Switzerland, nf) • Golo Mann (1909–1994, Germany/Switzerland, nf) • Heinrich Mann (1871–1950, Germany/US, f) • ",
"score": "1.4672899"
},
{
"id": "9258160",
"title": "Patricio Manns",
"text": " Manns is one of the most prolific writers in Chile. His literary creations embrace various genres, from novels with historical themes to essays and plays and he has published more than 30 works. The unique structures of his textual constructs and the seamless conductive literary technique he uniquely employs have made him the subject of scholarly study in various European and Latin American schools of literature and universities.",
"score": "1.4491949"
},
{
"id": "4146201",
"title": "Phillip Mann",
"text": " established Phillip Mann's reputation as a creator of 'credible aliens' – a feature which has remained prominent in his later works. He comments, \"Thinking about alien consciousness helps clarify my thinking about Earth and the way we conduct ourselves. Thus I think of my books as being about us, no matter how outlandish the scenario.\" The novel met with such critical success that some felt he would not be able to equal it. However, Master of Paxwax and its sequel, Fall of the Families, have become classics of New Zealand literature. Both books have been recorded in 15-minute episodes read by Dick Weir. They are regularly broadcast on Radio New Zealand. ",
"score": "1.4395443"
},
{
"id": "209858",
"title": "Ellie Mathews",
"text": " Ellie Mathews (born October 22, 1945, Port Angeles, Washington) is an author of fiction and nonfiction works including The Linden Tree (winner of the 2007 Milkweed Editions Prize for Children’s Literature). Her recipe for Salsa Couscous Chicken was the Grand Prize Winner of the 1998 Pillsbury Bake-Off. Mathews holds a degree in geography from the University of Washington, 1976 with emphasis on cartography and graphic arts. In her first career she linked those interests with software development. In the early 1990s she began writing. She has published fiction and nonfiction, has been honored with two fellowships and an arts commission award. Her book, Ambassador to the Penguins, A Naturalist’s Year Aboard a Yankee Whaleship about Robert Cushman Murphy's 1912 journey to South Georgia Island, came out to starred reviews. Her memoir The Ungarnished Truth, A Cooking Contest Memoir about winning the Pillsbury Bake-Off was published in March 2008 by Berkley Books.",
"score": "1.4346774"
},
{
"id": "29978198",
"title": "Rachel Mann",
"text": " Writing and English at the Manchester Writing School, Manchester Metropolitan University. She is also a Visiting Scholar at Sarum College. In 2019, Carcanet published her debut full poetry collection, A Kingdom of Love. The collection was Highly Commended in the 2020 Forward Prizes for Poetry. In 2020, her debut novel, ‘’The Gospel of Eve’’, was published by D.L.T. Mann is a regular contributor to The Church Times and contributes to BBC Radio 2’s Pause For Thought and BBC Radio 4's The Daily Service and Prayer For The Day. She also writes about progressive music, metal and folk for Prog Magazine, an offshoot of Classic Rock Magazine, and The Quietus.",
"score": "1.432986"
},
{
"id": "28298792",
"title": "The Manipulated Man",
"text": " The Manipulated Man (Der Dressierte Mann) is a 1971 book by author Esther Vilar. The main idea behind the book is that women are not oppressed by men but rather control men to their advantage. A third edition of the book was released in January 2009.",
"score": "1.4297212"
},
{
"id": "1789805",
"title": "Colette Mann",
"text": " Mann has been a regular feature writer in New Idea magazine. She wrote about her life and that of her sons. She has also written two books, It's A Mann's World (1990) and Give Me A Break (2002).",
"score": "1.4279081"
},
{
"id": "29738335",
"title": "Randall Mann",
"text": " In 2004, Mann was named to the OUT 100 list by OUT Magazine. He was named a Laureate of the San Francisco Public Library in 2010. In 2013, he received the J. Howard and Barbara M. J. Wood Prize from Poetry Magazine.",
"score": "1.4272957"
},
{
"id": "4144961",
"title": "Evelyn Juers",
"text": " Casa del exilio) by Circe. In 1933 the author and political activist Heinrich Mann and his partner Nelly Kroeger (later ) fled Nazi Germany, finding refuge first in the south of France and later, in great despair, in Los Angeles, where Nelly committed suicide in 1944 and Heinrich died in 1950. Born into a wealthy middle-class family in Lübeck, Heinrich Mann was one of the leading representatives of Weimar culture. Nelly was 27 years younger – the adopted daughter of a fisherman, a hostess in a Berlin bar – as far as his family was concerned, she was from the wrong side of the tracks. Their story is ",
"score": "1.425845"
},
{
"id": "1644834",
"title": "Richard Aellen",
"text": " Richard Aellen is an American author of novels and plays. In 2006, his Farmers of Men won the Stanley Drama Award. His most recent play, NOBODY, was performed at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival in Montgomery, Alabama, in 2008 and was read again there, in a revised version, in May 2009.",
"score": "1.4220672"
}
] | [
"Catherine Mann\n Catherine Mann is an American author of romance fiction. She has published numerous books with Berkley, Sourcebooks, and Harlequin Desire. In 2003 Mann won the \"Best Contemporary\" RITA Award for Taking Cover. She has also won a Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award, a Booksellers' Best Award, and celebrated six RITA Award finals. Mann holds a master's degree in Theater from UNC-Greensboro and a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from the College of Charleston.",
"Charles C. Mann\n Mann has written for Fortune, The New York Times, Smithsonian, Technology Review, Vanity Fair, and The Washington Post. In 2005 he wrote 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, followed in 2011 by 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. He served as a judge for the PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award in 2012. He is a three-time National Magazine Award finalist and a recipient of writing awards from the American Bar Association, the American Institute of Physics, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and the Lannan Foundation. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts with his wife and children. In 2018, Mann published The Wizard and the Prophet, which details two competing theories about the future of agriculture, population, and the environment. The titular \"wizard\" Mann refers to is Norman Borlaug, the Nobel Peace Prize winner credited with developing the Green Revolution and saving one billion people from starvation. Mann refers to William Vogt, an early proponent of population control, as the \"prophet\".",
"Nicholas Mann (occult writer)\n Nicholas R. Mann (born 1952) is the author of books on geomancy, mythology, the Celtic tradition, sacred geometry and, most recently, archaeoastronomy. Glastonbury, England, Avebury, England, Sedona, Arizona (USA) and Washington, DC (USA) are all locations which feature in his work. His book Druid Magic: The Practice of Celtic Wisdom, co-written with Maya Sutton, PhD, has been described by the British Druid Order as\"One of the best practical guides available...\" He is also an illustrator, producing the images for the Silver Branch Cards, a Celtic divination deck of his own design. He was born in Sussex, England. He lives in Somerset, England with his partner Philippa Glasson, with whom he co-authored The Star Temple of Avalon: Glastonbury's Ancient Observatory Revealed.",
"Phillip Mann\n and writing some plays and children's literature, in 2013 he published his first novel since 1996, The Disestablishment of Paradise. This is about the corruption by mankind of a pristine Earth-like planet called Paradise and subsequent banishment. In the 2017 New Year Honours, Mann was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature and drama. Mann divides his time between his home in Brooklyn, Wellington and a converted barn in the small town of Choussy in France's Loire Valley. He is now working on a new novel The Headman (a \"darkly comic novel\"), an anthology of short stories, and a work on theatre production.",
"Perminder Mann\n After studying at Kingston University, Mann began her career in publishing working for trade publishers Macmillan and Transworld, before moving on to work with two international independent publishers, Hinkler and Phidal Publishing. She then spent time in the toy industry, before returning to publishing to work for Bonnier Publishing, which rebranded as Bonnier Books UK in 2018. During her time at Bonnier Books UK, she co-founded adult non-fiction imprint Blink Publishing. In 2014, the imprint became the first UK publisher to collaborate with a vlogger when it signed Alfie Deyes. Under Mann, Blink published The Pointless Book, which was a 2014 bestseller. In 2015 and 2016, Mann was named on The Booksellers list of the 100 most influential people in publishing. She was also on the awards list of the top 10 most influential ",
"Perminder Mann\n Perminder Mann is the CEO of Bonnier Books UK, the sixth largest publisher in the UK with sales of over £80m. Mann is recognised as one of the UK's most powerful leaders and as a publishing innovator – one of the first to publish a social media influencer and for her work introducing inclusive workplace policy. Mann holds the position of Chair of the Publisher's Association Consumer Publishing Council, is a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a member of the advisory board for Kingston University's publishing program, and of the BBC100 steering group committee. She also appears annually in the UK's top 100 most influential people in book publishing, a list compiled by the industry's trade magazine, the Bookseller, and in 2015 was named as one of the top 10 most influential people in publishing and writing, at the prestigious Hospital Club h100 awards. Perminder Mann was the first CEO of a major publisher to announce the move to a full flexible working policy in 2020. Perminder is an advocate for inclusivity and collaboration in the workplace.",
"Evelyn Juers\n Her book House of Exile (2008), subtitled The Life and Times of Heinrich Mann and Nelly Kroeger-Mann, is a collective biography. It is based on published sources, interviews and extensive archival research in Europe and America. House of Exile was shortlisted for the Victorian Premier's Award for Non-Fiction (Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-fiction), the West Australian Book Awards, the National Biography Award, and the ALS Gold Medal. In 2009 it won the Prime Minister's Literary Awards in the non-fiction category. House of Exile is published in the US by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, in the UK by Allen Lane /Penguin, in France (Chemins d’Exil) by Autrement, and in Spain ",
"William J. Mann\n He got his start as a journalist at the now-defunct Hartford Monthly magazine. He freelanced for, among others, Architectural Digest, Connecticut magazine, Men's Fitness, Frontiers (Los Angeles), and The Boston Phoenix. He also wrote for and edited Metroline magazine, a gay-lesbian newsmagazine based in Hartford, Connecticut, before acting as publisher from 1992 to 1995. Mann's first novel, The Men From the Boys, was published by Dutton in 1997. He continued with a series of novels set in Provincetown, although he has also set his fiction in Palm Springs and Los Angeles. In addition, Mann has written the nonfiction books Wisecracker (1998), a ",
"Stanley Mann\n Stanley Mann (August 8, 1928 – January 11, 2016) was a Canadian screenwriter. Born in Toronto, Ontario, he began his writing career in 1951 at CBC Radio, and was nominated for an Oscar for his work on the 1965 film The Collector, based on the John Fowles novel of the same title. He worked in many different genres, but his best known credits included the horror sequel Damien: Omen II, the literary adaptations A High Wind in Jamaica, Eye of the Needle and Firestarter, and the sword-and-sorcery film Conan the Destroyer. He was married to Florence Wood in the 1950s, while living and working in London, England. Following their divorce in 1959, Wood married novelist Mordecai Richler, who adopted Mann's son Daniel. He died on January 11, 2016.",
"Manna (novel)\n Manna is a 2003 science fiction novel by Marshall Brain that explores several issues in modern information technology, automation and economics, as well as user interfaces and transhumanism.",
"List of authors by name: M\n nf) • Charles Mangua (1939–2021, Kenya, f) • Bill Manhire (born 1946, N Zealand, p/f) • Rani Manicka (living, Malaysia, f) • John Manifold (1915–1985, Australia, p/nf) • Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st c. CE, Roman E, p) • Frederick Edward Maning (1812–1883, N Zealand, nf) • Irshad Manji (born 1968, Uganda/Canada, nf) • Henning Mankell (1948–2015, Sweden, f/ch/d) • Guy Mankowski (born 1983, England, f/nf) • Delarivier Manley (1663 or c. 1670–1724, England, nf/d) • Alana Mann (living, Australia, nf) • Erika Mann (1905–1969, Germany/Switzerland, nf) • Golo Mann (1909–1994, Germany/Switzerland, nf) • Heinrich Mann (1871–1950, Germany/US, f) • ",
"Patricio Manns\n Manns is one of the most prolific writers in Chile. His literary creations embrace various genres, from novels with historical themes to essays and plays and he has published more than 30 works. The unique structures of his textual constructs and the seamless conductive literary technique he uniquely employs have made him the subject of scholarly study in various European and Latin American schools of literature and universities.",
"Phillip Mann\n established Phillip Mann's reputation as a creator of 'credible aliens' – a feature which has remained prominent in his later works. He comments, \"Thinking about alien consciousness helps clarify my thinking about Earth and the way we conduct ourselves. Thus I think of my books as being about us, no matter how outlandish the scenario.\" The novel met with such critical success that some felt he would not be able to equal it. However, Master of Paxwax and its sequel, Fall of the Families, have become classics of New Zealand literature. Both books have been recorded in 15-minute episodes read by Dick Weir. They are regularly broadcast on Radio New Zealand. ",
"Ellie Mathews\n Ellie Mathews (born October 22, 1945, Port Angeles, Washington) is an author of fiction and nonfiction works including The Linden Tree (winner of the 2007 Milkweed Editions Prize for Children’s Literature). Her recipe for Salsa Couscous Chicken was the Grand Prize Winner of the 1998 Pillsbury Bake-Off. Mathews holds a degree in geography from the University of Washington, 1976 with emphasis on cartography and graphic arts. In her first career she linked those interests with software development. In the early 1990s she began writing. She has published fiction and nonfiction, has been honored with two fellowships and an arts commission award. Her book, Ambassador to the Penguins, A Naturalist’s Year Aboard a Yankee Whaleship about Robert Cushman Murphy's 1912 journey to South Georgia Island, came out to starred reviews. Her memoir The Ungarnished Truth, A Cooking Contest Memoir about winning the Pillsbury Bake-Off was published in March 2008 by Berkley Books.",
"Rachel Mann\n Writing and English at the Manchester Writing School, Manchester Metropolitan University. She is also a Visiting Scholar at Sarum College. In 2019, Carcanet published her debut full poetry collection, A Kingdom of Love. The collection was Highly Commended in the 2020 Forward Prizes for Poetry. In 2020, her debut novel, ‘’The Gospel of Eve’’, was published by D.L.T. Mann is a regular contributor to The Church Times and contributes to BBC Radio 2’s Pause For Thought and BBC Radio 4's The Daily Service and Prayer For The Day. She also writes about progressive music, metal and folk for Prog Magazine, an offshoot of Classic Rock Magazine, and The Quietus.",
"The Manipulated Man\n The Manipulated Man (Der Dressierte Mann) is a 1971 book by author Esther Vilar. The main idea behind the book is that women are not oppressed by men but rather control men to their advantage. A third edition of the book was released in January 2009.",
"Colette Mann\n Mann has been a regular feature writer in New Idea magazine. She wrote about her life and that of her sons. She has also written two books, It's A Mann's World (1990) and Give Me A Break (2002).",
"Randall Mann\n In 2004, Mann was named to the OUT 100 list by OUT Magazine. He was named a Laureate of the San Francisco Public Library in 2010. In 2013, he received the J. Howard and Barbara M. J. Wood Prize from Poetry Magazine.",
"Evelyn Juers\n Casa del exilio) by Circe. In 1933 the author and political activist Heinrich Mann and his partner Nelly Kroeger (later ) fled Nazi Germany, finding refuge first in the south of France and later, in great despair, in Los Angeles, where Nelly committed suicide in 1944 and Heinrich died in 1950. Born into a wealthy middle-class family in Lübeck, Heinrich Mann was one of the leading representatives of Weimar culture. Nelly was 27 years younger – the adopted daughter of a fisherman, a hostess in a Berlin bar – as far as his family was concerned, she was from the wrong side of the tracks. Their story is ",
"Richard Aellen\n Richard Aellen is an American author of novels and plays. In 2006, his Farmers of Men won the Stanley Drama Award. His most recent play, NOBODY, was performed at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival in Montgomery, Alabama, in 2008 and was read again there, in a revised version, in May 2009."
] |
Who is the author of Rage? | [
"Jonathan Kellerman",
"Jonathan Seth Kellerman"
] | author | Rage (Kellerman novel) | 2,877,692 | 12 | [
{
"id": "29669709",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " Rage (written as Getting It On; the title was changed before publication) is a psychological thriller novel by American writer Stephen King, the first he published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. It was first published in 1977 and then was collected in 1985 in the hardcover omnibus The Bachman Books. The novel describes a school shooting, and has been associated with actual high school shooting incidents in the 1980s and 1990s. In response King allowed the novel to fall out of print, and in 2013 he published a non-fiction, anti-firearms violence essay titled \"Guns\".",
"score": "1.6744227"
},
{
"id": "10131037",
"title": "Writer of the Purple Rage",
"text": " Writer of the Purple Rage is a collection of short works by American author Joe R. Lansdale, published in 1994. It was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award in the \"Fiction Collection\" category. The title is a play on the Philip José Farmer novella \"Riders of the Purple Wage\", and before that, the Zane Grey novel Riders of the Purple Sage.",
"score": "1.6278799"
},
{
"id": "9408282",
"title": "Rage (Smith novel)",
"text": " Rage is a 1987 novel by Wilbur Smith set in the Union of South Africa, immediately following World War II. It starts in 1952 and goes until the late 1960s, touching on the country's declaration of a republic and the subsequent Sharpeville Massacre. The plot centers around Shasa Courtney and black resistance leader Moses Gama. Smith described it at the time as \"the most onerous book I have ever written... and also the biggest book\" because of its subject matter. At the time of its publication it was the longest South African novel with the paperback having 626 pages. The previous record holder had been Madge Swindells' 1983 novel Summer Harvest, which had 26 fewer pages.",
"score": "1.6252615"
},
{
"id": "16255742",
"title": "All the Rage (novel)",
"text": " All The Rage is the fourth volume in a series of Repairman Jack books written by American author F. Paul Wilson. The book was first published by Gauntlet Press in a signed limited first edition (July 2000) then later as a trade hardcover from Forge (November 2000) and as a mass market paperback from Forge (September 2000). Reviewer Charles de Lint recommended All the Rage as \"a hardboiled mystery, with a dash of the supernatural and a good helping of suspense and action.\"",
"score": "1.6106863"
},
{
"id": "2649831",
"title": "Rage (video game)",
"text": " that the survival of humankind does not necessarily mean the survival of humanity. The Earth has been devastated by a collision with an asteroid, with a tiny fraction of the population surviving in life-sustaining Arks buried deep below its surface. Those who survive emerge to find a wasteland controlled by a global military dictatorship called the Authority. But a rescued scientist learns that the Authority has lied to her and the other survivors about how this new world came to be. That same month, Bethesda announced that they would team up with Del Rey Books to create a novel based on Rage. The novel was written by Matthew J. Costello, also responsible for the video game. It was released on August 30, 2011.",
"score": "1.5938288"
},
{
"id": "9408289",
"title": "Rage (Smith novel)",
"text": " Worldwide it sold nearly a million copies in 1988 and was the best selling book in the United Kingdom in that same year.",
"score": "1.5907104"
},
{
"id": "29490124",
"title": "Heath High School shooting",
"text": " Carneal had in his locker at the time a copy of Stephen King's novel Rage (first published in 1977 under the pseudonym Richard Bachman). After this shooting, King requested his publisher to allow it to go out of print, fearing that it might inspire similar tragedies. Rage for a time continued to be available in the United Kingdom in The Bachman Books collection, although the collection now no longer contains Rage.",
"score": "1.566803"
},
{
"id": "29669719",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " When King decided to let Rage fall out of print in the United States, it remained available only as part of The Bachman Books. In contrast, the other novels that appeared in that compilation – The Long Walk, Roadwork, and The Running Man – are available separately in the US. Rage remained available in the United Kingdom and other countries in The Bachman Books for a time, but later appeared to become unavailable. New editions of The Bachman Books do not include Rage. In a footnote to the preface of the novel Blaze, dated January 30, 2007, King wrote of Rage: \"Now out of print, and a good thing.\" ",
"score": "1.5620089"
},
{
"id": "3439103",
"title": "Road Rage (audiobook)",
"text": " Road Rage is the title of an audiobook published in February 2009 by HarperAudio. It combines two short stories: Richard Matheson's Duel and its homage called Throttle written by Stephen King and his son Joe Hill (writer). Both stories are read by the American actor Stephen Lang.",
"score": "1.5542884"
},
{
"id": "33106940",
"title": "Black Rage (book)",
"text": " The book led to the legal concept of black rage, notably proposed as a defense by the defense attorneys representing Colin Ferguson (Ferguson went against the advice of his legal counsel and represented himself, arguing that he was completely innocent of the charges). Its working title was, Reflections on the Negro Psyche.",
"score": "1.5529728"
},
{
"id": "12302286",
"title": "Rage: A Love Story",
"text": " Rage: A Love Story is a young adult novel by Julie Anne Peters. It was first published in hardback in 2009. The story follows Johanna who falls in love with Reeve who has suffered much abuse in her life. When their relationship struggles, Reeve begins to physically abuse Johanna who stays with her girlfriend despite the violence. The cover is a reference to the famous pop art image by Robert Indiana.",
"score": "1.5485089"
},
{
"id": "29669714",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": "Jeffrey Lyne Cox, a senior at San Gabriel High School in San Gabriel, California, took a semi-automatic rifle to school on April 26, 1988, and held a humanities class of about 60 students hostage for over 30 minutes. Cox held the gun to one student when the teacher doubted Cox would cause harm and stated that he would prove it to her. At that time three students escaped out a rear door and were fired upon. Cox was later tackled and disarmed by another student. A friend of Cox's told the press that Cox had been inspired by the Kuwait Airways Flight 422 hijacking and by the novel Rage, which Cox ",
"score": "1.5466347"
},
{
"id": "29669718",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " three of them fatally, at a prayer meeting at Heath High School in West Paducah, Kentucky. He had a copy of Rage within the Richard Bachman omnibus in his locker. This was the incident that moved King to allow the book to go out of print. The plot of Rage vaguely resembles actual high school shootings and incidents of hostage-taking that have transpired since its publication. As a result, King became uncomfortable with the idea of having it remain in print, for fear that it might inspire further such occurrences (\"[Rage is] now out of print, and a good thing\"). The novel has been allegedly associated with the following events: ",
"score": "1.5440397"
},
{
"id": "5813962",
"title": "The Bachman Books",
"text": " The US editions of this collection and the novel Rage were allowed to go out of print by the author and publisher because of the Heath High School shooting. The remaining three novels are still in print and are published as separate books. The Bachman Books is still in print in the United Kingdom although it no longer contains Rage. In a footnote to the preface of the more recent Bachman novel Blaze (dated 30 January 2007) King wrote of Rage: \"Now out of print, and a good thing.\"",
"score": "1.5435634"
},
{
"id": "29669715",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " read over and over again and with which he strongly identified. ; Dustin L. Pierce, a senior at Jackson County High School in McKee, Kentucky, armed himself with a shotgun and two handguns and took a history classroom hostage in a nine-hour standoff with police on September 18, 1989, that ended without injury. Police found a copy of Rage among the possessions in Pierce's bedroom, leading to speculation that he had been inspired to carry out the plot of the novel. ; On January 18, 1993, Scott Pennington, a student at East Carter High School in Grayson, Kentucky, took a .38-caliber revolver that was owned by his father and fatally shot ",
"score": "1.5414352"
},
{
"id": "29669721",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " own frustrations and pains as a high school student. In an article on the ominous writings of Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho for Entertainment Weekly, King said: \"Certainly in this sensitized day and age, my own college writing—including a short story called 'Cain Rose Up' and the novel Rage—would have raised red flags, and I'm certain someone would have tabbed me as mentally ill because of them...\" After the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, he elaborated in a non-fiction essay, titled \"Guns\" (2013), on why he let Rage go out of print. King's website states: \"All profits from 'Guns' will benefit the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.\"",
"score": "1.5377768"
},
{
"id": "31494092",
"title": "A Rage to Live",
"text": " The novel was O'Hara's fourth book and his first in eleven years. The New York Times called it \"his most ambitious book. It is by no means entirely successful, but it does express a vibrant vitality.\" O'Hara said his earlier books \"were special books about specialised people; but this is the big one, the over-all one.\" The novel was a best seller.",
"score": "1.532846"
},
{
"id": "4478440",
"title": "Rage (Woodward book)",
"text": " Rage is a book by the American journalist Bob Woodward about the presidency of Donald Trump, published on September 15, 2020, by Simon & Schuster. It is a largely critical book, focusing on his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, his strained relationship with military brass and high-level officials such as Jim Mattis and Dan Coats, his handling of racial unrest, and his relationships with the leaders of Russia and North Korea. As with Woodward's 2018 Fear: Trump in the White House, the title of the book is derived from a conversation that Woodward had with Trump in March 2016. Woodward contended that \"a lot of angst and rage and distress\" was present in the Republican Party to which Trump replied that \"I bring rage out. I do bring rage out. I always have... I don't know if that's an asset or a liability, but whatever it is, I do. I also bring great unity out, ultimately. I've had many occasions like this, where people have hated me more than any human being they've ever met. And after it's all over, they end up being my friends. And I see that happening here\".",
"score": "1.5290327"
},
{
"id": "29669720",
"title": "Rage (King novel)",
"text": " said, in his keynote address at the VEMA Annual Meeting on May 26, 1999: \"The Carneal incident was enough for me. I asked my publisher to take the damned thing out of print. They concurred.\" King went on to describe his view on this subject, which acknowledged the role that cultural or artistic products such as Rage play in influencing individuals, particularly troubled youths, while also declaring that artists and writers should not be denied the aesthetic opportunity to draw upon their own culture—which is suffused with violence, according to King—in their work. King went on to describe his inspiration for stories such as Rage, which drew heavily upon ",
"score": "1.525362"
},
{
"id": "33106941",
"title": "Black Rage (book)",
"text": " The authors both were psychiatrists who, in the mid-1960s, founded a clinic in San Francisco and later, authored another book together, The Jesus Bag in 1971. Price M. Cobbs also wrote an autobiography entitled, My American Life: From Rage to Entitlement (ISBN: 0-7434-9622-1), about his experiences following the publication of Black Rage. He died on June 25, 2018 at the age of 89. He authored several books and was a resource to many on the topics of understanding cultural stereotyping, prejudice, and race relations. William H. Grier, who died in 2015, was the father of comedian David Alan Grier.",
"score": "1.5185127"
}
] | [
"Rage (King novel)\n Rage (written as Getting It On; the title was changed before publication) is a psychological thriller novel by American writer Stephen King, the first he published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. It was first published in 1977 and then was collected in 1985 in the hardcover omnibus The Bachman Books. The novel describes a school shooting, and has been associated with actual high school shooting incidents in the 1980s and 1990s. In response King allowed the novel to fall out of print, and in 2013 he published a non-fiction, anti-firearms violence essay titled \"Guns\".",
"Writer of the Purple Rage\n Writer of the Purple Rage is a collection of short works by American author Joe R. Lansdale, published in 1994. It was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award in the \"Fiction Collection\" category. The title is a play on the Philip José Farmer novella \"Riders of the Purple Wage\", and before that, the Zane Grey novel Riders of the Purple Sage.",
"Rage (Smith novel)\n Rage is a 1987 novel by Wilbur Smith set in the Union of South Africa, immediately following World War II. It starts in 1952 and goes until the late 1960s, touching on the country's declaration of a republic and the subsequent Sharpeville Massacre. The plot centers around Shasa Courtney and black resistance leader Moses Gama. Smith described it at the time as \"the most onerous book I have ever written... and also the biggest book\" because of its subject matter. At the time of its publication it was the longest South African novel with the paperback having 626 pages. The previous record holder had been Madge Swindells' 1983 novel Summer Harvest, which had 26 fewer pages.",
"All the Rage (novel)\n All The Rage is the fourth volume in a series of Repairman Jack books written by American author F. Paul Wilson. The book was first published by Gauntlet Press in a signed limited first edition (July 2000) then later as a trade hardcover from Forge (November 2000) and as a mass market paperback from Forge (September 2000). Reviewer Charles de Lint recommended All the Rage as \"a hardboiled mystery, with a dash of the supernatural and a good helping of suspense and action.\"",
"Rage (video game)\n that the survival of humankind does not necessarily mean the survival of humanity. The Earth has been devastated by a collision with an asteroid, with a tiny fraction of the population surviving in life-sustaining Arks buried deep below its surface. Those who survive emerge to find a wasteland controlled by a global military dictatorship called the Authority. But a rescued scientist learns that the Authority has lied to her and the other survivors about how this new world came to be. That same month, Bethesda announced that they would team up with Del Rey Books to create a novel based on Rage. The novel was written by Matthew J. Costello, also responsible for the video game. It was released on August 30, 2011.",
"Rage (Smith novel)\n Worldwide it sold nearly a million copies in 1988 and was the best selling book in the United Kingdom in that same year.",
"Heath High School shooting\n Carneal had in his locker at the time a copy of Stephen King's novel Rage (first published in 1977 under the pseudonym Richard Bachman). After this shooting, King requested his publisher to allow it to go out of print, fearing that it might inspire similar tragedies. Rage for a time continued to be available in the United Kingdom in The Bachman Books collection, although the collection now no longer contains Rage.",
"Rage (King novel)\n When King decided to let Rage fall out of print in the United States, it remained available only as part of The Bachman Books. In contrast, the other novels that appeared in that compilation – The Long Walk, Roadwork, and The Running Man – are available separately in the US. Rage remained available in the United Kingdom and other countries in The Bachman Books for a time, but later appeared to become unavailable. New editions of The Bachman Books do not include Rage. In a footnote to the preface of the novel Blaze, dated January 30, 2007, King wrote of Rage: \"Now out of print, and a good thing.\" ",
"Road Rage (audiobook)\n Road Rage is the title of an audiobook published in February 2009 by HarperAudio. It combines two short stories: Richard Matheson's Duel and its homage called Throttle written by Stephen King and his son Joe Hill (writer). Both stories are read by the American actor Stephen Lang.",
"Black Rage (book)\n The book led to the legal concept of black rage, notably proposed as a defense by the defense attorneys representing Colin Ferguson (Ferguson went against the advice of his legal counsel and represented himself, arguing that he was completely innocent of the charges). Its working title was, Reflections on the Negro Psyche.",
"Rage: A Love Story\n Rage: A Love Story is a young adult novel by Julie Anne Peters. It was first published in hardback in 2009. The story follows Johanna who falls in love with Reeve who has suffered much abuse in her life. When their relationship struggles, Reeve begins to physically abuse Johanna who stays with her girlfriend despite the violence. The cover is a reference to the famous pop art image by Robert Indiana.",
"Rage (King novel)\nJeffrey Lyne Cox, a senior at San Gabriel High School in San Gabriel, California, took a semi-automatic rifle to school on April 26, 1988, and held a humanities class of about 60 students hostage for over 30 minutes. Cox held the gun to one student when the teacher doubted Cox would cause harm and stated that he would prove it to her. At that time three students escaped out a rear door and were fired upon. Cox was later tackled and disarmed by another student. A friend of Cox's told the press that Cox had been inspired by the Kuwait Airways Flight 422 hijacking and by the novel Rage, which Cox ",
"Rage (King novel)\n three of them fatally, at a prayer meeting at Heath High School in West Paducah, Kentucky. He had a copy of Rage within the Richard Bachman omnibus in his locker. This was the incident that moved King to allow the book to go out of print. The plot of Rage vaguely resembles actual high school shootings and incidents of hostage-taking that have transpired since its publication. As a result, King became uncomfortable with the idea of having it remain in print, for fear that it might inspire further such occurrences (\"[Rage is] now out of print, and a good thing\"). The novel has been allegedly associated with the following events: ",
"The Bachman Books\n The US editions of this collection and the novel Rage were allowed to go out of print by the author and publisher because of the Heath High School shooting. The remaining three novels are still in print and are published as separate books. The Bachman Books is still in print in the United Kingdom although it no longer contains Rage. In a footnote to the preface of the more recent Bachman novel Blaze (dated 30 January 2007) King wrote of Rage: \"Now out of print, and a good thing.\"",
"Rage (King novel)\n read over and over again and with which he strongly identified. ; Dustin L. Pierce, a senior at Jackson County High School in McKee, Kentucky, armed himself with a shotgun and two handguns and took a history classroom hostage in a nine-hour standoff with police on September 18, 1989, that ended without injury. Police found a copy of Rage among the possessions in Pierce's bedroom, leading to speculation that he had been inspired to carry out the plot of the novel. ; On January 18, 1993, Scott Pennington, a student at East Carter High School in Grayson, Kentucky, took a .38-caliber revolver that was owned by his father and fatally shot ",
"Rage (King novel)\n own frustrations and pains as a high school student. In an article on the ominous writings of Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho for Entertainment Weekly, King said: \"Certainly in this sensitized day and age, my own college writing—including a short story called 'Cain Rose Up' and the novel Rage—would have raised red flags, and I'm certain someone would have tabbed me as mentally ill because of them...\" After the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, he elaborated in a non-fiction essay, titled \"Guns\" (2013), on why he let Rage go out of print. King's website states: \"All profits from 'Guns' will benefit the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.\"",
"A Rage to Live\n The novel was O'Hara's fourth book and his first in eleven years. The New York Times called it \"his most ambitious book. It is by no means entirely successful, but it does express a vibrant vitality.\" O'Hara said his earlier books \"were special books about specialised people; but this is the big one, the over-all one.\" The novel was a best seller.",
"Rage (Woodward book)\n Rage is a book by the American journalist Bob Woodward about the presidency of Donald Trump, published on September 15, 2020, by Simon & Schuster. It is a largely critical book, focusing on his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, his strained relationship with military brass and high-level officials such as Jim Mattis and Dan Coats, his handling of racial unrest, and his relationships with the leaders of Russia and North Korea. As with Woodward's 2018 Fear: Trump in the White House, the title of the book is derived from a conversation that Woodward had with Trump in March 2016. Woodward contended that \"a lot of angst and rage and distress\" was present in the Republican Party to which Trump replied that \"I bring rage out. I do bring rage out. I always have... I don't know if that's an asset or a liability, but whatever it is, I do. I also bring great unity out, ultimately. I've had many occasions like this, where people have hated me more than any human being they've ever met. And after it's all over, they end up being my friends. And I see that happening here\".",
"Rage (King novel)\n said, in his keynote address at the VEMA Annual Meeting on May 26, 1999: \"The Carneal incident was enough for me. I asked my publisher to take the damned thing out of print. They concurred.\" King went on to describe his view on this subject, which acknowledged the role that cultural or artistic products such as Rage play in influencing individuals, particularly troubled youths, while also declaring that artists and writers should not be denied the aesthetic opportunity to draw upon their own culture—which is suffused with violence, according to King—in their work. King went on to describe his inspiration for stories such as Rage, which drew heavily upon ",
"Black Rage (book)\n The authors both were psychiatrists who, in the mid-1960s, founded a clinic in San Francisco and later, authored another book together, The Jesus Bag in 1971. Price M. Cobbs also wrote an autobiography entitled, My American Life: From Rage to Entitlement (ISBN: 0-7434-9622-1), about his experiences following the publication of Black Rage. He died on June 25, 2018 at the age of 89. He authored several books and was a resource to many on the topics of understanding cultural stereotyping, prejudice, and race relations. William H. Grier, who died in 2015, was the father of comedian David Alan Grier."
] |
Who is the author of Kid? | [
"Simon Armitage",
"Simon Robert Armitage"
] | author | Kid (poetry collection) | 981,484 | 84 | [
{
"id": "10830075",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " The Kid was first published by Dutton in 1999 as a hardcover edition. Plume publishing company released an e-book in 1999. A subsequent edition was published in 2000 in London by Fusion, and in the United States by Penguin Putnam Inc. A paperback edition was published by Plume in 2000. The book was published in Italian in 2002 by Tascabili Degli Editori.",
"score": "1.6487732"
},
{
"id": "10830076",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " The Kid received a PEN Center USA West Award. It was recognized with the award in 2000, in the category of Excellence in Creative Nonfiction. Writing in the journal Feminist Economics, June Lapidus called The Kid a \"warm, funny, and insightful book\". Author Andrew R. Gottlieb wrote in the book Sons Talk About Their Gay Fathers: Life Curves, \"Fast and funny, incisive and insightful, Dan Savage's (1999) The Kid is an exploration of one gay man's experience and one gay couple's experience confronting the open adoption bureaucracy. With razor-sharp scrutiny, Savage spares no one, including himself.\" A review for The News Tribune by Linda Dahlstrom commented that the book was quite moving, \"In fact, that's one of ",
"score": "1.6327487"
},
{
"id": "10830072",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant is a non-fiction book by Dan Savage. It was first published by Dutton in 1999. The book recounts the author's experiences during the process of adopting a child with his partner, Terry. Savage details for the reader his emotional states at various times during the adoption period and how it affected his life. The Kid is the recipient of a PEN West Award. Robin Williams production company purchased the options to develop the book for television in 2000. The book was adapted into a musical in 2010 by librettist Michael Zam, with music composed by Andy Monroe, and lyrics by Jack Lechner. Christopher Sieber starred in the lead role as Dan. It was performed Off-Broadway in Theatre Row, New York City, and directed by Scott Elliott. The play was the recipient of the BMI Foundation Jerry Bock Award for Excellence in Musical Theatre in 2009.",
"score": "1.5492735"
},
{
"id": "24907897",
"title": "Katie Couric",
"text": " as \"Diane Sawyer\" during the segment. Couric is the author of two children's books and a non-fiction collection of essays. Her children's books The Brand New Kid (2000) and The Blue Ribbon Day (2004) were illustrated by Marjorie Priceman and published by Doubleday. The Brand New Kid topped the New York Times best seller list for children's picture books, and was adapted into a 2006 musical by Melanie Marnich and Michael Friedman. Couric's third book, The Best Advice I Ever Got: Lessons from Extraordinary Lives, was published by Random House in 2011. The book is a collection of essays compiled over the past year by Couric; contributors include ",
"score": "1.5423713"
},
{
"id": "10830073",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " The Kid delves into the machinations involved in the process of adopting an infant boy, through the experiences of the author and his boyfriend. Savage describes the psychological roller-coaster experience of deciding to go through with the process, such as worrying about which items to purchase to support raising an infant, moments where he was nervous about how it would impact his sex life, and what his straight and gay friends would think. Savage comments that an LGBT activist thought those who adopt children were ideal candidates if they were \"men in their forties, together at least eight years, monogamous, professional, irreproachable, and unassailable.\" He expresses \"a complex sense of moral obligation\" in writing the narrative. Terry, Savage's boyfriend at the time for two years, initially helped him look into the option of seeking out lesbian ",
"score": "1.5390716"
},
{
"id": "7715476",
"title": "Greg James",
"text": " Together with newsreader Chris Smith, James wrote the children's book series Kid Normal which is a 6-book series about a normal boy in a superhero world. The first one was published by Bloomsbury and released on 13 July 2017 in the UK and the second one the following March. The first book was the biggest selling children's debut of the year and have sold over 100,000 copies combined. The books have also been released in 19 other languages around the world.",
"score": "1.536511"
},
{
"id": "4591887",
"title": "David Yelland (journalist)",
"text": " Yelland has written a children's novel about a 10-year-old who tries to hide his father's alcoholism, titled The Truth about Leo, which was published by Penguin Books in April 2010.",
"score": "1.5346824"
},
{
"id": "10830078",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " mood, Savage provides a lovely tale about the thrill of anticipating a baby—even when it isn't yours (by birth).\" Publishers Weekly reviewed the work and commented, \"Employing the blunt tone of his columns, Savage humorously and honestly discusses his sexual practices (including bondage and fantasies involving actor Matt Damon), his ambivalence about being a parent and his rage at his homophobic grandmother. His forthrightness is brave and daring in the face of social opposition to gay parenting.\" The review concluded, \"However, though Savage's chatty, mercilessly satiric style is effective in his columns and may be intended here to balance the optimistic underpinnings of his journey into parenthood, in this sustained narrative it wears a bit thin.\"",
"score": "1.5344533"
},
{
"id": "3651398",
"title": "The Arizona Kid (novel)",
"text": " The Arizona Kid is a 1988 novel by Ron Koertge about a summer 16-year-old Billy spends living with his gay uncle and working with racehorses.",
"score": "1.5344014"
},
{
"id": "354250",
"title": "Kid (poetry collection)",
"text": " Kid is the second collection of poems by Simon Armitage, published in 1992. It was his first publication with Faber & Faber. The collection was described by Ruth Padel as being \"Very Yorkshire; very Simon Armitage\".",
"score": "1.533371"
},
{
"id": "6368493",
"title": "Dhalgren",
"text": " a book of Kid's poems. As the novel progresses, Kid falls in with the Scorpions, a loose-knit gang, three of whom have severely beaten him earlier in the book. Almost accidentally, Kid becomes their leader. (Much of this suggests the American \"mythical folk hero,\" Billy the Kid, whom Delany used in his earlier, Nebula Award-winning novel, The Einstein Intersection [1967].) Denny, a 15-year-old scorpion, becomes Kid's and Lanya's lover, so that the relationship with Lanya turns into a lasting three-way sexual linkage. Kid also begins writing things other than poems in the notebook, keeping a journal of events and his thoughts. In Chapter VI, \"Palimpsest\", Calkins ",
"score": "1.5284646"
},
{
"id": "10830079",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " In 2000, the production company of Robin Williams, Blue Wolf Productions, purchased the options to develop the book for television.",
"score": "1.5208675"
},
{
"id": "4760510",
"title": "Bill Henderson (publisher)",
"text": " Henderson is the author of the novel The Kid That Could (1970); and the memoirs His Son (1980); Her Father (1995); Tower (2000); Simple Gifts (2006); and All My Dogs: A Life (2011). His most recent memoir, Cathedral: An Illness and a Healing was published in 2014. Two New York Times articles detail Tower and Cathedral.",
"score": "1.5177227"
},
{
"id": "14452524",
"title": "The Kid (musical)",
"text": " The Kid is a musical with a book by Michael Zam, music composed by Andy Monroe and lyrics by Jack Lechner. The comic story concerns an open adoption process by a same-sex couple. It is based on the 1999 non-fiction book by Dan Savage, The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant. The protagonist, Dan, is a sex advice columnist who decides to adopt a child with his partner Terry. Throughout the musical the couple encounter difficulties including making the decision to adopt, finding a birth mother, and overcoming apprehension about the adoption process. The musical premiered on May 10, 2010 Off-Broadway, starring Christopher Sieber as Dan. It received a generally favorable reception and received five Drama Desk Award nominations in 2011, including Outstanding Musical, Outstanding Lyrics and Outstanding Book of a Musical;",
"score": "1.5158789"
},
{
"id": "10830080",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " In 2010, The Kid was produced as a musical Off-Broadway. The play was developed by librettist Michael Zam. Music for the play was composed by Andy Monroe, with lyrics by Jack Lechner. Savage was portrayed by Christopher Sieber. It was performed in Theatre Row, New York City, from The New Group, with director Scott Elliott. The Kid was the recipient of the BMI Foundation Jerry Bock Award for Excellence in Musical Theatre in 2009. The New York Times gave the musical a favorable review: \"Vibrators, leather bars and good old-fashioned sodomy have never looked more wholesome than they do in The Kid.\" The Star-Ledger reviewer commented, \"It's a really funny show. And rather touching, as well. A lot of the jokes are based on the would-be adoptive couple being two men. But the ",
"score": "1.4999533"
},
{
"id": "8360663",
"title": "The Colorado Kid",
"text": " The Colorado Kid was originally published in 2005 as a paperback original by Hard Case Crime. In 2007, PS Publishing published the novel as a hardcover limited edition in four different states illustrated by three different artists (Edward Miller, J.K. Potter, and Glenn Chadbourne). An audiobook of The Colorado Kid was produced by Simon & Schuster Audio, narrated by Jeffrey DeMunn.",
"score": "1.4988319"
},
{
"id": "10830077",
"title": "The Kid (book)",
"text": " surprises of the book—that in the end, above everything else, it's a touching, funny story about an American family in the '90s.\" Gwen Florio of The Philadelphia Inquirer described the section of the book where the child's mother gives the baby to his new parents as \"the most wrenching scene.\" Entertainment Weekly characterized the work as \"one of the best books published in 1999\", and called the author's writing, \"as moving as it is entertaining\". A review in Salon described the book as \"a very moving memoir.\" Reviewer Daryl Lindsey commented, \"Despite the expediency of their experience, the book is full of twists and turns, each subjected to Savage's snide and penetrating wit. And in an uncharacteristically ",
"score": "1.4974058"
},
{
"id": "4307878",
"title": "The Gilt Kid",
"text": " The novel was originally published in London by Jonathan Cape in 1936 and reissued in 1947 as no.623 in the Penguin main series. In 2007 London Books republished it having spent years out of print. The reissue features an introduction by Paul Willetts, biographer of author Julian MacLaren-Ross, and an interview with Curtis' daughter, Nicolette Edwards.",
"score": "1.4957128"
},
{
"id": "29236361",
"title": "Joseph Zornado",
"text": " Joseph Zornado is an American college professor, author of a well-received book in the field of children's literature (Inventing the Child, Garland, 2000/Routledge 2006) as well as a science fiction novel, 2050: Gods of Little Earth, originally published by Speculative Fiction Review in 2007. Inventing the Child is an account of childhood at the start of a new millennium. Zornado analyzes several of the dominant notions of childhood which lead to this moment, such as those of Calvin, Freud, and Rousseau, and finally the \"consumer childhood\" era of Dr. Spock and television. He argues that the stories we tell our children, from fairy tales to Disney videos, perpetuate the materialism and conformity of our dominant culture. The book has been praised by writers such as Daniel Quinn, who calls it \"among the two or three most eye-opening, illuminating, and important books I've ever ",
"score": "1.4940338"
},
{
"id": "2202072",
"title": "The Kid Who Only Hit Homers",
"text": " The Kid Who Only Hit Homers (1972) is a children's novel about baseball written by Matt Christopher. It was the first in a series of four novels featuring a young man (Sylvester Coddmeyer III) who is trained to play baseball by supernatural visitations from former Major League players.",
"score": "1.4879427"
}
] | [
"The Kid (book)\n The Kid was first published by Dutton in 1999 as a hardcover edition. Plume publishing company released an e-book in 1999. A subsequent edition was published in 2000 in London by Fusion, and in the United States by Penguin Putnam Inc. A paperback edition was published by Plume in 2000. The book was published in Italian in 2002 by Tascabili Degli Editori.",
"The Kid (book)\n The Kid received a PEN Center USA West Award. It was recognized with the award in 2000, in the category of Excellence in Creative Nonfiction. Writing in the journal Feminist Economics, June Lapidus called The Kid a \"warm, funny, and insightful book\". Author Andrew R. Gottlieb wrote in the book Sons Talk About Their Gay Fathers: Life Curves, \"Fast and funny, incisive and insightful, Dan Savage's (1999) The Kid is an exploration of one gay man's experience and one gay couple's experience confronting the open adoption bureaucracy. With razor-sharp scrutiny, Savage spares no one, including himself.\" A review for The News Tribune by Linda Dahlstrom commented that the book was quite moving, \"In fact, that's one of ",
"The Kid (book)\n The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant is a non-fiction book by Dan Savage. It was first published by Dutton in 1999. The book recounts the author's experiences during the process of adopting a child with his partner, Terry. Savage details for the reader his emotional states at various times during the adoption period and how it affected his life. The Kid is the recipient of a PEN West Award. Robin Williams production company purchased the options to develop the book for television in 2000. The book was adapted into a musical in 2010 by librettist Michael Zam, with music composed by Andy Monroe, and lyrics by Jack Lechner. Christopher Sieber starred in the lead role as Dan. It was performed Off-Broadway in Theatre Row, New York City, and directed by Scott Elliott. The play was the recipient of the BMI Foundation Jerry Bock Award for Excellence in Musical Theatre in 2009.",
"Katie Couric\n as \"Diane Sawyer\" during the segment. Couric is the author of two children's books and a non-fiction collection of essays. Her children's books The Brand New Kid (2000) and The Blue Ribbon Day (2004) were illustrated by Marjorie Priceman and published by Doubleday. The Brand New Kid topped the New York Times best seller list for children's picture books, and was adapted into a 2006 musical by Melanie Marnich and Michael Friedman. Couric's third book, The Best Advice I Ever Got: Lessons from Extraordinary Lives, was published by Random House in 2011. The book is a collection of essays compiled over the past year by Couric; contributors include ",
"The Kid (book)\n The Kid delves into the machinations involved in the process of adopting an infant boy, through the experiences of the author and his boyfriend. Savage describes the psychological roller-coaster experience of deciding to go through with the process, such as worrying about which items to purchase to support raising an infant, moments where he was nervous about how it would impact his sex life, and what his straight and gay friends would think. Savage comments that an LGBT activist thought those who adopt children were ideal candidates if they were \"men in their forties, together at least eight years, monogamous, professional, irreproachable, and unassailable.\" He expresses \"a complex sense of moral obligation\" in writing the narrative. Terry, Savage's boyfriend at the time for two years, initially helped him look into the option of seeking out lesbian ",
"Greg James\n Together with newsreader Chris Smith, James wrote the children's book series Kid Normal which is a 6-book series about a normal boy in a superhero world. The first one was published by Bloomsbury and released on 13 July 2017 in the UK and the second one the following March. The first book was the biggest selling children's debut of the year and have sold over 100,000 copies combined. The books have also been released in 19 other languages around the world.",
"David Yelland (journalist)\n Yelland has written a children's novel about a 10-year-old who tries to hide his father's alcoholism, titled The Truth about Leo, which was published by Penguin Books in April 2010.",
"The Kid (book)\n mood, Savage provides a lovely tale about the thrill of anticipating a baby—even when it isn't yours (by birth).\" Publishers Weekly reviewed the work and commented, \"Employing the blunt tone of his columns, Savage humorously and honestly discusses his sexual practices (including bondage and fantasies involving actor Matt Damon), his ambivalence about being a parent and his rage at his homophobic grandmother. His forthrightness is brave and daring in the face of social opposition to gay parenting.\" The review concluded, \"However, though Savage's chatty, mercilessly satiric style is effective in his columns and may be intended here to balance the optimistic underpinnings of his journey into parenthood, in this sustained narrative it wears a bit thin.\"",
"The Arizona Kid (novel)\n The Arizona Kid is a 1988 novel by Ron Koertge about a summer 16-year-old Billy spends living with his gay uncle and working with racehorses.",
"Kid (poetry collection)\n Kid is the second collection of poems by Simon Armitage, published in 1992. It was his first publication with Faber & Faber. The collection was described by Ruth Padel as being \"Very Yorkshire; very Simon Armitage\".",
"Dhalgren\n a book of Kid's poems. As the novel progresses, Kid falls in with the Scorpions, a loose-knit gang, three of whom have severely beaten him earlier in the book. Almost accidentally, Kid becomes their leader. (Much of this suggests the American \"mythical folk hero,\" Billy the Kid, whom Delany used in his earlier, Nebula Award-winning novel, The Einstein Intersection [1967].) Denny, a 15-year-old scorpion, becomes Kid's and Lanya's lover, so that the relationship with Lanya turns into a lasting three-way sexual linkage. Kid also begins writing things other than poems in the notebook, keeping a journal of events and his thoughts. In Chapter VI, \"Palimpsest\", Calkins ",
"The Kid (book)\n In 2000, the production company of Robin Williams, Blue Wolf Productions, purchased the options to develop the book for television.",
"Bill Henderson (publisher)\n Henderson is the author of the novel The Kid That Could (1970); and the memoirs His Son (1980); Her Father (1995); Tower (2000); Simple Gifts (2006); and All My Dogs: A Life (2011). His most recent memoir, Cathedral: An Illness and a Healing was published in 2014. Two New York Times articles detail Tower and Cathedral.",
"The Kid (musical)\n The Kid is a musical with a book by Michael Zam, music composed by Andy Monroe and lyrics by Jack Lechner. The comic story concerns an open adoption process by a same-sex couple. It is based on the 1999 non-fiction book by Dan Savage, The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant. The protagonist, Dan, is a sex advice columnist who decides to adopt a child with his partner Terry. Throughout the musical the couple encounter difficulties including making the decision to adopt, finding a birth mother, and overcoming apprehension about the adoption process. The musical premiered on May 10, 2010 Off-Broadway, starring Christopher Sieber as Dan. It received a generally favorable reception and received five Drama Desk Award nominations in 2011, including Outstanding Musical, Outstanding Lyrics and Outstanding Book of a Musical;",
"The Kid (book)\n In 2010, The Kid was produced as a musical Off-Broadway. The play was developed by librettist Michael Zam. Music for the play was composed by Andy Monroe, with lyrics by Jack Lechner. Savage was portrayed by Christopher Sieber. It was performed in Theatre Row, New York City, from The New Group, with director Scott Elliott. The Kid was the recipient of the BMI Foundation Jerry Bock Award for Excellence in Musical Theatre in 2009. The New York Times gave the musical a favorable review: \"Vibrators, leather bars and good old-fashioned sodomy have never looked more wholesome than they do in The Kid.\" The Star-Ledger reviewer commented, \"It's a really funny show. And rather touching, as well. A lot of the jokes are based on the would-be adoptive couple being two men. But the ",
"The Colorado Kid\n The Colorado Kid was originally published in 2005 as a paperback original by Hard Case Crime. In 2007, PS Publishing published the novel as a hardcover limited edition in four different states illustrated by three different artists (Edward Miller, J.K. Potter, and Glenn Chadbourne). An audiobook of The Colorado Kid was produced by Simon & Schuster Audio, narrated by Jeffrey DeMunn.",
"The Kid (book)\n surprises of the book—that in the end, above everything else, it's a touching, funny story about an American family in the '90s.\" Gwen Florio of The Philadelphia Inquirer described the section of the book where the child's mother gives the baby to his new parents as \"the most wrenching scene.\" Entertainment Weekly characterized the work as \"one of the best books published in 1999\", and called the author's writing, \"as moving as it is entertaining\". A review in Salon described the book as \"a very moving memoir.\" Reviewer Daryl Lindsey commented, \"Despite the expediency of their experience, the book is full of twists and turns, each subjected to Savage's snide and penetrating wit. And in an uncharacteristically ",
"The Gilt Kid\n The novel was originally published in London by Jonathan Cape in 1936 and reissued in 1947 as no.623 in the Penguin main series. In 2007 London Books republished it having spent years out of print. The reissue features an introduction by Paul Willetts, biographer of author Julian MacLaren-Ross, and an interview with Curtis' daughter, Nicolette Edwards.",
"Joseph Zornado\n Joseph Zornado is an American college professor, author of a well-received book in the field of children's literature (Inventing the Child, Garland, 2000/Routledge 2006) as well as a science fiction novel, 2050: Gods of Little Earth, originally published by Speculative Fiction Review in 2007. Inventing the Child is an account of childhood at the start of a new millennium. Zornado analyzes several of the dominant notions of childhood which lead to this moment, such as those of Calvin, Freud, and Rousseau, and finally the \"consumer childhood\" era of Dr. Spock and television. He argues that the stories we tell our children, from fairy tales to Disney videos, perpetuate the materialism and conformity of our dominant culture. The book has been praised by writers such as Daniel Quinn, who calls it \"among the two or three most eye-opening, illuminating, and important books I've ever ",
"The Kid Who Only Hit Homers\n The Kid Who Only Hit Homers (1972) is a children's novel about baseball written by Matt Christopher. It was the first in a series of four novels featuring a young man (Sylvester Coddmeyer III) who is trained to play baseball by supernatural visitations from former Major League players."
] |
Who is the author of It's Not an All Night Fair? | [
"Pramoedya Ananta Toer"
] | author | It's Not an All Night Fair | 1,060,414 | 81 | [
{
"id": "1621253",
"title": "It's Not an All Night Fair",
"text": " Bukan Pasar Malam (English title: It's Not an All Night Fair) is an Indonesian novel that published in 1951 by Balai Pustaka. This novel was written by Pramoedya Ananta Toer, the author of This Earth of Mankind. This novel has been published in six languages.",
"score": "2.0223155"
},
{
"id": "5551882",
"title": "Atlanta Nights",
"text": " The authors subsequently published the book through print on demand publisher Lulu under the pseudonym \"Travis Tea\" with all profits going to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Emergency Medical Fund. Teresa Nielsen Hayden's review said, \"The world is full of bad books written by amateurs. But why settle for the merely regrettable? Atlanta Nights is a bad book written by experts.\"",
"score": "1.4568732"
},
{
"id": "2814014",
"title": "Lewis Nordan",
"text": "Welcome to the Arrow-Catcher Fair (1983) – short stories ; The All-Girl Football Team (1986) – short stories ; Music of the Swamp (1991) – novel/short story cycle ; Wolf Whistle (1993) – novel ; The Sharpshooter Blues (1995) – novel ; Sugar Among the Freaks: Selected Stories (1996) – short stories (nothing new all reprints from 1st 2 books) ; Lightning Song (1997) – novel ; Boy With Loaded Gun (2000) – memoir ; WOULD YOU SHUT UP, PLEASE (2014) - posthumous single short story e-book ",
"score": "1.4480137"
},
{
"id": "4187107",
"title": "Bernard Taylor (author)",
"text": "So Long at the Fair, 2002 ; Too Close to the Sun, 2002 ; Wait for the Dawn, 2004 ; Saddle the Wind, 2004 ; No Wings to Fly, 2006 ",
"score": "1.4456007"
},
{
"id": "12982386",
"title": "Andrea Syrtash",
"text": " Syrtash contributed to a number of titles published by Hundreds of Heads Books and served as the Special Editor of How to Survive the Real World (2006) and How to Survive Your In-Laws. She is the author of He's Just Not Your Type (And That's a Good Thing) (Rodale Books, 2010) and Cheat On Your Husband (With Your Husband) (Rodale Books, 2011). She is the co-author of It's Okay to Sleep with Him on the First Date (Harlequin Non-Fiction, July 2013).",
"score": "1.4443924"
},
{
"id": "30277768",
"title": "Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival",
"text": " ; Michael Pritchard ; Joe Quirk, author of The Ultimate Rush, It's Not You, It's Biology, Exult ; Kemble Scott, (novelist pen name of Scott James, columnist for The New York Times) author of SoMa, The Sower ; Robert Scheer, syndicated columnist ; Julia Flynn Siler, author of The House of Mondavi: The Rise and Fall of an American Wine Dynasty ; Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone ; Jan Yanehiro, co-author of This Is Not the Life I Ordered ; Jeffrey Zaslow, co-author of The Last Lecture Some of the speakers who have presented at the festival to date: In alphabetical order ",
"score": "1.441791"
},
{
"id": "16583309",
"title": "It's Just Not My Night",
"text": " It’s Just Not My Night: Tale of a Fallen Vampire Queen (世が夜なら!) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Muchimaro. It was serialized in Kodansha's manga app and website Magazine Pocket from June 2020 to October 2021.",
"score": "1.4204266"
},
{
"id": "907003",
"title": "Buzz Bissinger",
"text": " Harry Gerard Bissinger III, also known as Buzz Bissinger and H. G. Bissinger (born November 1, 1954) is an American journalist and author, best known for his 1990 non-fiction book Friday Night Lights. He is a longtime contributing editor at Vanity Fair magazine. In 2019, HBO released a documentary on Bissinger titled “Buzz”. ",
"score": "1.4171598"
},
{
"id": "7192477",
"title": "State Fair (novel)",
"text": " encouraged to finish the book by his agent, who told him that publishers were seeking \"a Sinclair Lewis story more humorous and fairer to small town people than Main Street\". Robert A. McCown wrote in his foreword to the 1996 University of Iowa Press edition of State Fair that the work \"is very much an Iowa book, filled with incidents and details from the author's own life.\" However, McCown noted that although the early 20th century state fair setting was \"accurately portrayed\", Stong was a novelist, not a historian, and that \"there is undeniably an element of make-believe\" in the work. According to McCown, Stong wrote \"an artistic representation of the fair, not presenting the literal truth.\"",
"score": "1.3948228"
},
{
"id": "11544712",
"title": "Alice Notley",
"text": " The book took its title from the address of their home on Long Island and was published by Berrigan's C Press. It bears a dedication to James Schuyler and Anne and Fairfield Porter, who were also residing together on Long Island at the time. Notley also thanks Tom Clark who would go on to re-publish the sonnet cycle in his anthology All Stars. Notley and Berrigan spent the several months between Long Island and Chicago in Bolinas, California, which is where Berrigan officially printed 165 Meeting House Lane. Notley's second book, Phoebe Light, was published in 1973 by Bill Berkson's Bolinas-based press Big Sky.",
"score": "1.3939924"
},
{
"id": "27799692",
"title": "Christine Campbell Thomson",
"text": "1. Not at Night (October 1925; reprint, 1936). Not to be confused with the Herbert Asbury collection of the same title (see below) which is a limited selection (to 1928) from the British series; nor with the title published by Arrow Books (see below) which is also a selection from the series. ; 2. More Not at Night (Sept. 1926). Not to be confused with the title published by Arrow Books (see below) which is a selection from the series. ; 3. You'll Need A Night Light (Sept. 1927) Contains \"Out of the Earth\" by Flavia Richardson. ; 4. Gruesome Cargoes (July 1928) Contains \"When Hell Laughed\" by Flavia Richardson. ; 5. By Daylight Only (Oct. 1929)[not be confused with the title Only By Daylight which is a pbk reissue of the Arrow compilation Still Not at Night ",
"score": "1.3864541"
},
{
"id": "26849964",
"title": "It's Not My Fault! (children's book)",
"text": " It's Not My Fault! is a children's book about emotional literacy written by Jory John, illustrated by Jared Chapman, and published June 9, 2020 by Random House Books for Young Readers.",
"score": "1.3799338"
},
{
"id": "32549595",
"title": "Ditmar Award results",
"text": "\"All the Love in the World\", Cat Sparks, Sprawl (Twelfth Planet Press) ; \"Bread and Circuses\", Felicity Dowker, Scary Kisses (Ticonderoga Publications) ; \"One Saturday Night With Angel\", Peter M. Ball, Sprawl (Twelfth Planet Press) ; \"She Said\", Kirstyn McDermott, Scenes From the Second Storey (Morrigan Books) ; \"The House of Nameless\", Jason Fischer, Writers of the Future XXVI (Galaxy Press) ; \"The February Dragon\", Angela Slatter and Lisa L. Hannett, Scary Kisses (Ticonderoga Publications) ",
"score": "1.3772388"
},
{
"id": "15915763",
"title": "Courtney Summers",
"text": " to its release, all of Summers' novels were contemporary and realistic. This is Not a Test received a starred review from Publishers Weekly and was optioned for television by Sony. Summers announced that a script was currently in development in April 2015. In January 2015, Summers released an e-novella sequel to This is Not a Test, Please Remain Calm. Summers' fifth novel, All the Rage, was her hardcover debut and published in April 2015. It was chosen as the sixth official selection of Tumblr's Reblog Book Club and received starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal. It was also named a Spring 2015 Junior ",
"score": "1.375917"
},
{
"id": "30875580",
"title": "National Book Critics Circle Award",
"text": "Juan Felipe Herrera, Half the World in Light (University of Arizona Press) ; Devin Johnston, Sources (Turtle Point Press) ; August Kleinzahler, Sleeping it Off in Rapid City (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux) ; Pierre Martory (trans. John Ashbery), The Landscapist (Sheep Meadow Press) ; Brenda Shaughnessy, Human Dark with Sugar (Copper Canyon Press) ",
"score": "1.3755616"
},
{
"id": "12877679",
"title": "Alan Gordon (author)",
"text": " Alan Gordon (born 1959) is the author of several historical mysteries, the first of which is based on the characters from William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. He lives in New York City and is a lawyer with the Legal Aid Society. Gordon has also written the libretto for several musicals, including \"The Girl Detective\" and \"The Usual.\" He won the 2013 Kleban Prize for Most Promising Musical Theatre Librettist for \"The Usual.\" A graduate of Swarthmore College and the University of Chicago Law School, he is married to Judy Downer, with whom he has a son, Robert.",
"score": "1.3746715"
},
{
"id": "7497089",
"title": "Elizabeth Fair",
"text": " Fair wrote six novels of English village life that humorously and gently dissected the \"polite social politics\" of village denizens while managing to incorporate a romance or two. Reviewers typically compare her work to that of Margery Sharp or Angela Thirkell, with Stevie Smith and other reviewers noting that her work has affinities with Trollope. Of her novel All One Summer, the author wrote that it was meant for people like herself who \"prefer not to take life too seriously\". Writer Compton Mackenzie said of this novel that it was \"in the best tradition of English humour\". Fair's third novel, The Native Heath (1954) was published with a jacket design by Shirley Hughes. Fair published her last novel in 1960 and died in 1997.",
"score": "1.3743751"
},
{
"id": "12472224",
"title": "List of films: A",
"text": " All Things Fair (1995) ; All This and Rabbit Stew (1941) ; All This, and Heaven Too (1940) ; All Through the Night (1941) ; All Together Now (2008) ; All Under the Moon (1993) ; All for the Winner (1990) ; All You Need Is Cash (1978) ; All You Need Is Love (2015) ; All's Well, Ends Well (1992) ; All's Well, Ends Well Too (1993) ; All-American Murder (1992) ; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987) ; Allari Bullodu (2005) ; Allegro Non Troppo (1977) ; Allende en su laberinto (2014) ; Alles ",
"score": "1.3731151"
},
{
"id": "26447686",
"title": "Erin Morgenstern",
"text": " Erin Morgenstern (born July 8, 1978) is an American multimedia artist and the author of two fantasy novels. The Night Circus (2011) was published in more than a dozen languages by 2013 and won the annual Locus Award for Best First Novel. She is a 2012 recipient of an Alex Award. Her second book, The Starless Sea, was published in 2019.",
"score": "1.3729783"
},
{
"id": "27264872",
"title": "Acquainted with the Night (book)",
"text": " At the time of Acquainted with the Night's writing, author and poet Christopher Dewdney was 52 years old and living in Toronto with his wife, Barbara Gowdy. He had previously written 14 books, the last being the 2002 book of poetry, The Natural History. His previous non-fiction books were Last Flesh: Life in the Transhuman Era (1998) on the impacts of technological advances on humanism, The Secular Grail: Paradigms of Perception (1993) regarding the human psyche, and The Immaculate Perception (1986) on his views of consciousness, language and dreams. Dewdney's past books were described as being \"more admired than read\". On the topic of 'the night', he had a lifelong fascination with nightlife and eventually decided to write a book about it. He quickly became overwhelmed by the amount of information relating to the subject. For research, he consulted a variety of genres and formats, including books, journals, magazines, music, and movies, and collected information within the broad topics of art, science, social sciences and history. The perspective Dewdney took was that of \"explaining night to beings from another planet that had two opposed suns and no night at all\".",
"score": "1.3721309"
}
] | [
"It's Not an All Night Fair\n Bukan Pasar Malam (English title: It's Not an All Night Fair) is an Indonesian novel that published in 1951 by Balai Pustaka. This novel was written by Pramoedya Ananta Toer, the author of This Earth of Mankind. This novel has been published in six languages.",
"Atlanta Nights\n The authors subsequently published the book through print on demand publisher Lulu under the pseudonym \"Travis Tea\" with all profits going to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Emergency Medical Fund. Teresa Nielsen Hayden's review said, \"The world is full of bad books written by amateurs. But why settle for the merely regrettable? Atlanta Nights is a bad book written by experts.\"",
"Lewis Nordan\nWelcome to the Arrow-Catcher Fair (1983) – short stories ; The All-Girl Football Team (1986) – short stories ; Music of the Swamp (1991) – novel/short story cycle ; Wolf Whistle (1993) – novel ; The Sharpshooter Blues (1995) – novel ; Sugar Among the Freaks: Selected Stories (1996) – short stories (nothing new all reprints from 1st 2 books) ; Lightning Song (1997) – novel ; Boy With Loaded Gun (2000) – memoir ; WOULD YOU SHUT UP, PLEASE (2014) - posthumous single short story e-book ",
"Bernard Taylor (author)\nSo Long at the Fair, 2002 ; Too Close to the Sun, 2002 ; Wait for the Dawn, 2004 ; Saddle the Wind, 2004 ; No Wings to Fly, 2006 ",
"Andrea Syrtash\n Syrtash contributed to a number of titles published by Hundreds of Heads Books and served as the Special Editor of How to Survive the Real World (2006) and How to Survive Your In-Laws. She is the author of He's Just Not Your Type (And That's a Good Thing) (Rodale Books, 2010) and Cheat On Your Husband (With Your Husband) (Rodale Books, 2011). She is the co-author of It's Okay to Sleep with Him on the First Date (Harlequin Non-Fiction, July 2013).",
"Carmel Authors and Ideas Festival\n ; Michael Pritchard ; Joe Quirk, author of The Ultimate Rush, It's Not You, It's Biology, Exult ; Kemble Scott, (novelist pen name of Scott James, columnist for The New York Times) author of SoMa, The Sower ; Robert Scheer, syndicated columnist ; Julia Flynn Siler, author of The House of Mondavi: The Rise and Fall of an American Wine Dynasty ; Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone ; Jan Yanehiro, co-author of This Is Not the Life I Ordered ; Jeffrey Zaslow, co-author of The Last Lecture Some of the speakers who have presented at the festival to date: In alphabetical order ",
"It's Just Not My Night\n It’s Just Not My Night: Tale of a Fallen Vampire Queen (世が夜なら!) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Muchimaro. It was serialized in Kodansha's manga app and website Magazine Pocket from June 2020 to October 2021.",
"Buzz Bissinger\n Harry Gerard Bissinger III, also known as Buzz Bissinger and H. G. Bissinger (born November 1, 1954) is an American journalist and author, best known for his 1990 non-fiction book Friday Night Lights. He is a longtime contributing editor at Vanity Fair magazine. In 2019, HBO released a documentary on Bissinger titled “Buzz”. ",
"State Fair (novel)\n encouraged to finish the book by his agent, who told him that publishers were seeking \"a Sinclair Lewis story more humorous and fairer to small town people than Main Street\". Robert A. McCown wrote in his foreword to the 1996 University of Iowa Press edition of State Fair that the work \"is very much an Iowa book, filled with incidents and details from the author's own life.\" However, McCown noted that although the early 20th century state fair setting was \"accurately portrayed\", Stong was a novelist, not a historian, and that \"there is undeniably an element of make-believe\" in the work. According to McCown, Stong wrote \"an artistic representation of the fair, not presenting the literal truth.\"",
"Alice Notley\n The book took its title from the address of their home on Long Island and was published by Berrigan's C Press. It bears a dedication to James Schuyler and Anne and Fairfield Porter, who were also residing together on Long Island at the time. Notley also thanks Tom Clark who would go on to re-publish the sonnet cycle in his anthology All Stars. Notley and Berrigan spent the several months between Long Island and Chicago in Bolinas, California, which is where Berrigan officially printed 165 Meeting House Lane. Notley's second book, Phoebe Light, was published in 1973 by Bill Berkson's Bolinas-based press Big Sky.",
"Christine Campbell Thomson\n1. Not at Night (October 1925; reprint, 1936). Not to be confused with the Herbert Asbury collection of the same title (see below) which is a limited selection (to 1928) from the British series; nor with the title published by Arrow Books (see below) which is also a selection from the series. ; 2. More Not at Night (Sept. 1926). Not to be confused with the title published by Arrow Books (see below) which is a selection from the series. ; 3. You'll Need A Night Light (Sept. 1927) Contains \"Out of the Earth\" by Flavia Richardson. ; 4. Gruesome Cargoes (July 1928) Contains \"When Hell Laughed\" by Flavia Richardson. ; 5. By Daylight Only (Oct. 1929)[not be confused with the title Only By Daylight which is a pbk reissue of the Arrow compilation Still Not at Night ",
"It's Not My Fault! (children's book)\n It's Not My Fault! is a children's book about emotional literacy written by Jory John, illustrated by Jared Chapman, and published June 9, 2020 by Random House Books for Young Readers.",
"Ditmar Award results\n\"All the Love in the World\", Cat Sparks, Sprawl (Twelfth Planet Press) ; \"Bread and Circuses\", Felicity Dowker, Scary Kisses (Ticonderoga Publications) ; \"One Saturday Night With Angel\", Peter M. Ball, Sprawl (Twelfth Planet Press) ; \"She Said\", Kirstyn McDermott, Scenes From the Second Storey (Morrigan Books) ; \"The House of Nameless\", Jason Fischer, Writers of the Future XXVI (Galaxy Press) ; \"The February Dragon\", Angela Slatter and Lisa L. Hannett, Scary Kisses (Ticonderoga Publications) ",
"Courtney Summers\n to its release, all of Summers' novels were contemporary and realistic. This is Not a Test received a starred review from Publishers Weekly and was optioned for television by Sony. Summers announced that a script was currently in development in April 2015. In January 2015, Summers released an e-novella sequel to This is Not a Test, Please Remain Calm. Summers' fifth novel, All the Rage, was her hardcover debut and published in April 2015. It was chosen as the sixth official selection of Tumblr's Reblog Book Club and received starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal. It was also named a Spring 2015 Junior ",
"National Book Critics Circle Award\nJuan Felipe Herrera, Half the World in Light (University of Arizona Press) ; Devin Johnston, Sources (Turtle Point Press) ; August Kleinzahler, Sleeping it Off in Rapid City (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux) ; Pierre Martory (trans. John Ashbery), The Landscapist (Sheep Meadow Press) ; Brenda Shaughnessy, Human Dark with Sugar (Copper Canyon Press) ",
"Alan Gordon (author)\n Alan Gordon (born 1959) is the author of several historical mysteries, the first of which is based on the characters from William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. He lives in New York City and is a lawyer with the Legal Aid Society. Gordon has also written the libretto for several musicals, including \"The Girl Detective\" and \"The Usual.\" He won the 2013 Kleban Prize for Most Promising Musical Theatre Librettist for \"The Usual.\" A graduate of Swarthmore College and the University of Chicago Law School, he is married to Judy Downer, with whom he has a son, Robert.",
"Elizabeth Fair\n Fair wrote six novels of English village life that humorously and gently dissected the \"polite social politics\" of village denizens while managing to incorporate a romance or two. Reviewers typically compare her work to that of Margery Sharp or Angela Thirkell, with Stevie Smith and other reviewers noting that her work has affinities with Trollope. Of her novel All One Summer, the author wrote that it was meant for people like herself who \"prefer not to take life too seriously\". Writer Compton Mackenzie said of this novel that it was \"in the best tradition of English humour\". Fair's third novel, The Native Heath (1954) was published with a jacket design by Shirley Hughes. Fair published her last novel in 1960 and died in 1997.",
"List of films: A\n All Things Fair (1995) ; All This and Rabbit Stew (1941) ; All This, and Heaven Too (1940) ; All Through the Night (1941) ; All Together Now (2008) ; All Under the Moon (1993) ; All for the Winner (1990) ; All You Need Is Cash (1978) ; All You Need Is Love (2015) ; All's Well, Ends Well (1992) ; All's Well, Ends Well Too (1993) ; All-American Murder (1992) ; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987) ; Allari Bullodu (2005) ; Allegro Non Troppo (1977) ; Allende en su laberinto (2014) ; Alles ",
"Erin Morgenstern\n Erin Morgenstern (born July 8, 1978) is an American multimedia artist and the author of two fantasy novels. The Night Circus (2011) was published in more than a dozen languages by 2013 and won the annual Locus Award for Best First Novel. She is a 2012 recipient of an Alex Award. Her second book, The Starless Sea, was published in 2019.",
"Acquainted with the Night (book)\n At the time of Acquainted with the Night's writing, author and poet Christopher Dewdney was 52 years old and living in Toronto with his wife, Barbara Gowdy. He had previously written 14 books, the last being the 2002 book of poetry, The Natural History. His previous non-fiction books were Last Flesh: Life in the Transhuman Era (1998) on the impacts of technological advances on humanism, The Secular Grail: Paradigms of Perception (1993) regarding the human psyche, and The Immaculate Perception (1986) on his views of consciousness, language and dreams. Dewdney's past books were described as being \"more admired than read\". On the topic of 'the night', he had a lifelong fascination with nightlife and eventually decided to write a book about it. He quickly became overwhelmed by the amount of information relating to the subject. For research, he consulted a variety of genres and formats, including books, journals, magazines, music, and movies, and collected information within the broad topics of art, science, social sciences and history. The perspective Dewdney took was that of \"explaining night to beings from another planet that had two opposed suns and no night at all\"."
] |
Who is the author of Heaven? | [
"Jack Cohen"
] | author | Heaven (Stewart and Cohen novel) | 4,357,548 | 51 | [
{
"id": "10696854",
"title": "Earth and High Heaven",
"text": " Originally published by Jonathan Cape and Thomas Nelson & Sons (Canada), the most recent edition of the novel was published by Toronto's Cormorant Books in 2004.",
"score": "1.5354141"
},
{
"id": "7072645",
"title": "The Discovery of Heaven",
"text": " The Discovery of Heaven (De ontdekking van de hemel) is a 1992 novel by Dutch writer Harry Mulisch. It is considered Mulisch's masterpiece and was voted best book in the Dutch language in a 2007 poll among the readers of NRC Handelsblad. A 2001 film adaptation by director Jeroen Krabbé features Stephen Fry and Flora Montgomery in the leading roles.",
"score": "1.5276165"
},
{
"id": "14466282",
"title": "Ira Stanphill",
"text": " Stanphill was the author of the book This Side of Heaven.",
"score": "1.5171187"
},
{
"id": "25442895",
"title": "Heaven (Kawakami novel)",
"text": " Kawakami, on her personal website, cited Thus Spoke Zarathustra as having given her ideas for writing this book.",
"score": "1.4740794"
},
{
"id": "3512106",
"title": "Heaven and Earth (book)",
"text": " Heaven and Earth is a sequel to a previous work by Plimer called A Short History of Planet Earth. Published in 2001, A Short History was based on a decade's worth of radio broadcasts by Plimer aimed mainly at rural Australians. It became a bestseller and won a Eureka Prize in 2002. However, Plimer was unable to find any major publisher willing to publish his follow-up book. He attributed this to there being \"a lot of fear out there. No one wants to go against the popular paradigm.\" Plimer turned to Connor Court Publishing. The company has a history of publishing books on \"culture, justice and religion\", including many books on Christianity and Catholicism in particular. It ",
"score": "1.4602106"
},
{
"id": "14917898",
"title": "Ann Ree Colton",
"text": " disciples, and heaven. ; The Soul and the Ethic ; The Human Spirit ; The Jesus Story Three books are on the subject of the inner kingdom and include writings on nature, reincarnation, and death. ; Draughts of Remembrance ; Men in White Apparel ; The Venerable One Ethical ESP ; Watch Your Dreams ; Kundalini West ; The Third Music Prophet for the Archangels (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; Galaxy Gate I and II (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; The Pelican and the Chela (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; My Son Ikhnaton (published posthumously) ; The Anointed (published posthumously, Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; Archetypal Kingdom ",
"score": "1.4535921"
},
{
"id": "25442894",
"title": "Heaven (Kawakami novel)",
"text": " Heaven (ヘヴン) is a 2009 novel by Mieko Kawakami. Its English translation, released in 2021 and published by Europa Editions, had Sam Bett and David Boyd as the translators. This is the second work written by Kawakami to receive an English translation. The title refers to a painting in the story which one of the characters, a girl named Kojima, gave a new name.",
"score": "1.4533064"
},
{
"id": "5042993",
"title": "From Earth to Heaven",
"text": " From Earth to Heaven is a collection of seventeen scientific essays by American writer and scientist Isaac Asimov. It was the fifth of a series of books collecting essays from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. It was first published by Doubleday & Company in 1966.",
"score": "1.4457705"
},
{
"id": "30880189",
"title": "Jakob Lorber",
"text": " this book, heaven and hell are presented as conditions already within us, expressed according to whether we live in harmony or contrary to God's divine order. The Great Gospel of John also states that the gospels of John and Matthew were written at the time of the events they chronicle; for instance, Lorber writes that Jesus specifically told Matthew to take notes during the Sermon on the Mount. Such an account seems at first contrary to the current consensus of biblical scholarship which typically places the authorship of Matthew some years after the resurrection of Jesus Christ and that of John even later. However, in the Great Gospel of John the narrator explains how this happened. He claims that there were many writers who described him, including several authors named Matthew, who all wrote similarly over a period of many years.",
"score": "1.4335423"
},
{
"id": "7072662",
"title": "The Discovery of Heaven",
"text": " In 2001 the book was made into a movie of the same name by Jeroen Krabbé. Mulisch allowed his novel be adapted for film on condition that the English comedian Stephen Fry play Onno Quist. Krabbé did not follow the book closely and removed some of the longer pieces, especially the friendship between Max and Onno and the youth of Quinten. He changed some events for dramatic reasons.",
"score": "1.427829"
},
{
"id": "15081705",
"title": "The Heaven Makers",
"text": " The Heaven Makers (1968) is a science fiction novel by American writer Frank Herbert. It was originally serialized in Amazing Stories magazine in 1967.",
"score": "1.4255888"
},
{
"id": "16301352",
"title": "More Things in Heaven",
"text": " More Things in Heaven is a science fiction novel by British writer John Brunner, published in 1973 by Dell Books. It is partly based on an earlier work, The Astronauts Must Not Land copyrighted in 1963 by Ace Books. The title is taken from Shakespeare's Hamlet Act 1. Scene V.",
"score": "1.4125845"
},
{
"id": "16410247",
"title": "Eye of Heaven",
"text": " Eye of Heaven is a BBC Books original novel written by Jim Mortimore and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Fourth Doctor, and Leela.",
"score": "1.4107001"
},
{
"id": "31954832",
"title": "Henry Harbaugh",
"text": "Heaven, or the Sainted Dead (3 vols., 1843–53) ; Heavenly Recognition (1851) ; The Heavenly Home (1853) ; Union with the Church (1853) ; Birds of the Bible (1854) ; Life of Rev. Richard Schlatter (1857) ; The Fathers of the German Reformed Church (1858) ; The True Glory of Woman, and a Plea for the Lord's Portion of a Christian's Wealth (1860) ; The Golden Censer (1860) ; Hymns and Chants (Lebanon, 1861) ; Christological Theology (Philadelphia, 1864) He published some poems in Pennsylvania Dutch, and also wrote: He compiled numerous church almanacs, edited The Child's Treasury, and contributed a great number of sketches to the German Reformed Church \"Cyclopaedia.\" From 1850 to 1866 he was the editor of the Guardian, a monthly magazine which he founded. Later he was editor of the Mercersburg Review and was on the staff of the Reformed Church Messenger.",
"score": "1.4078796"
},
{
"id": "6728446",
"title": "Mr. Rager",
"text": " serious, he was always joking around. But I could hear in his voice and see in his facial expression how earnest he was when he said to me, 'I call this a dream or a vision because I don't know how else to describe it. But I was awake.'\" When Will the Heaven Begin? reached the top ten on The New York Times Best Seller list beginning the first week of its release date. Her memoir follows other best-selling releases of spiritual books about heaven, including Heaven Is for Real by Todd Burpo, Proof of Heaven by Eben Alexander and To Heaven and Back by Mary Neal. However, Ally ",
"score": "1.4034722"
},
{
"id": "30857767",
"title": "Rebecca Ruter Springer",
"text": " Rebecca Ruter Springer (November 8, 1832 – September 7, 1904) was an American author. She began to publish verses shortly after finishing school, and thereafter contributed to leading periodicals. Among her works is the Christian book Intra Muros, better known today as My Dream of Heaven. As the modern name implies, Springer claimed to have a vision of a Christian heaven, and she recounts this vision in her book as well as some personal insights.",
"score": "1.4033487"
},
{
"id": "2054606",
"title": "Heaven's Prisoners (novel)",
"text": " Heaven's Prisoners is a crime novel written by James Lee Burke and published by Simon & Schuster in 1988. The fictional work follows Dave Robicheaux, a retired police officer and army lieutenant, who finds himself in a situation where he must protect his wife and a plane-crash survivor from a local drug kingpin. Heaven's Prisoners is the second novel by James Lee Burke featuring Dave Robicheaux, and was adapted into a film in 1996.",
"score": "1.4029598"
},
{
"id": "3309874",
"title": "Carol Zaleski",
"text": " Lewis, Owen Barfield, Charles Williams which received laudatory reviews from The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Time, and the Los Angeles Times. Zaleski is celebrated for her writings on the afterlife, which include the Encyclopædia Britannica articles on heaven, hell, and purgatory. Journalist Lisa Miller has called her \"the mother of modern heaven studies\". Her published lectures include \"In Defense of Immortality\", which was part of the Ingersoll Lectures on Human Immortality, and the Albert Cardinal Meyer Lectures at the University of University of Saint Mary of the Lake (published as \"The Life of the World to Come\"). She writes a ",
"score": "1.4013963"
},
{
"id": "26814375",
"title": "Jeffrey Burton Russell",
"text": " was flat. As one writer summarizes, \"Russell also examined a large selection of textbooks and found those written before 1870 usually included the correct account, but most textbooks written after 1880 uncritically repeated the erroneous claims in Washington Irving, John William Draper and Andrew Dickson White. Russell concludes that Irving, Draper and White were the main writers responsible for introducing the erroneous flat-earth myth that is still with us today.\" Russell has also written two books on the history of the notion of Heaven: A History of Heaven: The Singing Silence (1997), which deals with the period from around 200 B.C. up to Dante, and Paradise Mislaid (2006), which takes the story up to the present day.",
"score": "1.3997409"
},
{
"id": "9091998",
"title": "The Revenge of Heaven",
"text": " names of the two interpreters Ms. Ting Kuang-sheng and Liu Kunsheng, implicitly indicating that there was no Chinese original, and the name Ken Ling as „yuan zhu“ (source material writer). In their preface, the two interpreters gratefully acknowledge Professor Ta-Ling Lee, Professor London, Miriam London and Ken Ling, whom they address as „yuan zuo-zhe“ (source material writer). “Yuan zhu” and “yuan zuo-zhe“ can be translated as “writer of source material“. The translation of the original American preface is also included. Miriam London and Ta-Ling Lee are rather inconspicuously registered in the attributions after Ken Ling as the \"source material ",
"score": "1.3996158"
}
] | [
"Earth and High Heaven\n Originally published by Jonathan Cape and Thomas Nelson & Sons (Canada), the most recent edition of the novel was published by Toronto's Cormorant Books in 2004.",
"The Discovery of Heaven\n The Discovery of Heaven (De ontdekking van de hemel) is a 1992 novel by Dutch writer Harry Mulisch. It is considered Mulisch's masterpiece and was voted best book in the Dutch language in a 2007 poll among the readers of NRC Handelsblad. A 2001 film adaptation by director Jeroen Krabbé features Stephen Fry and Flora Montgomery in the leading roles.",
"Ira Stanphill\n Stanphill was the author of the book This Side of Heaven.",
"Heaven (Kawakami novel)\n Kawakami, on her personal website, cited Thus Spoke Zarathustra as having given her ideas for writing this book.",
"Heaven and Earth (book)\n Heaven and Earth is a sequel to a previous work by Plimer called A Short History of Planet Earth. Published in 2001, A Short History was based on a decade's worth of radio broadcasts by Plimer aimed mainly at rural Australians. It became a bestseller and won a Eureka Prize in 2002. However, Plimer was unable to find any major publisher willing to publish his follow-up book. He attributed this to there being \"a lot of fear out there. No one wants to go against the popular paradigm.\" Plimer turned to Connor Court Publishing. The company has a history of publishing books on \"culture, justice and religion\", including many books on Christianity and Catholicism in particular. It ",
"Ann Ree Colton\n disciples, and heaven. ; The Soul and the Ethic ; The Human Spirit ; The Jesus Story Three books are on the subject of the inner kingdom and include writings on nature, reincarnation, and death. ; Draughts of Remembrance ; Men in White Apparel ; The Venerable One Ethical ESP ; Watch Your Dreams ; Kundalini West ; The Third Music Prophet for the Archangels (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; Galaxy Gate I and II (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; The Pelican and the Chela (Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; My Son Ikhnaton (published posthumously) ; The Anointed (published posthumously, Jonathan Murro, co-author) ; Archetypal Kingdom ",
"Heaven (Kawakami novel)\n Heaven (ヘヴン) is a 2009 novel by Mieko Kawakami. Its English translation, released in 2021 and published by Europa Editions, had Sam Bett and David Boyd as the translators. This is the second work written by Kawakami to receive an English translation. The title refers to a painting in the story which one of the characters, a girl named Kojima, gave a new name.",
"From Earth to Heaven\n From Earth to Heaven is a collection of seventeen scientific essays by American writer and scientist Isaac Asimov. It was the fifth of a series of books collecting essays from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. It was first published by Doubleday & Company in 1966.",
"Jakob Lorber\n this book, heaven and hell are presented as conditions already within us, expressed according to whether we live in harmony or contrary to God's divine order. The Great Gospel of John also states that the gospels of John and Matthew were written at the time of the events they chronicle; for instance, Lorber writes that Jesus specifically told Matthew to take notes during the Sermon on the Mount. Such an account seems at first contrary to the current consensus of biblical scholarship which typically places the authorship of Matthew some years after the resurrection of Jesus Christ and that of John even later. However, in the Great Gospel of John the narrator explains how this happened. He claims that there were many writers who described him, including several authors named Matthew, who all wrote similarly over a period of many years.",
"The Discovery of Heaven\n In 2001 the book was made into a movie of the same name by Jeroen Krabbé. Mulisch allowed his novel be adapted for film on condition that the English comedian Stephen Fry play Onno Quist. Krabbé did not follow the book closely and removed some of the longer pieces, especially the friendship between Max and Onno and the youth of Quinten. He changed some events for dramatic reasons.",
"The Heaven Makers\n The Heaven Makers (1968) is a science fiction novel by American writer Frank Herbert. It was originally serialized in Amazing Stories magazine in 1967.",
"More Things in Heaven\n More Things in Heaven is a science fiction novel by British writer John Brunner, published in 1973 by Dell Books. It is partly based on an earlier work, The Astronauts Must Not Land copyrighted in 1963 by Ace Books. The title is taken from Shakespeare's Hamlet Act 1. Scene V.",
"Eye of Heaven\n Eye of Heaven is a BBC Books original novel written by Jim Mortimore and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Fourth Doctor, and Leela.",
"Henry Harbaugh\nHeaven, or the Sainted Dead (3 vols., 1843–53) ; Heavenly Recognition (1851) ; The Heavenly Home (1853) ; Union with the Church (1853) ; Birds of the Bible (1854) ; Life of Rev. Richard Schlatter (1857) ; The Fathers of the German Reformed Church (1858) ; The True Glory of Woman, and a Plea for the Lord's Portion of a Christian's Wealth (1860) ; The Golden Censer (1860) ; Hymns and Chants (Lebanon, 1861) ; Christological Theology (Philadelphia, 1864) He published some poems in Pennsylvania Dutch, and also wrote: He compiled numerous church almanacs, edited The Child's Treasury, and contributed a great number of sketches to the German Reformed Church \"Cyclopaedia.\" From 1850 to 1866 he was the editor of the Guardian, a monthly magazine which he founded. Later he was editor of the Mercersburg Review and was on the staff of the Reformed Church Messenger.",
"Mr. Rager\n serious, he was always joking around. But I could hear in his voice and see in his facial expression how earnest he was when he said to me, 'I call this a dream or a vision because I don't know how else to describe it. But I was awake.'\" When Will the Heaven Begin? reached the top ten on The New York Times Best Seller list beginning the first week of its release date. Her memoir follows other best-selling releases of spiritual books about heaven, including Heaven Is for Real by Todd Burpo, Proof of Heaven by Eben Alexander and To Heaven and Back by Mary Neal. However, Ally ",
"Rebecca Ruter Springer\n Rebecca Ruter Springer (November 8, 1832 – September 7, 1904) was an American author. She began to publish verses shortly after finishing school, and thereafter contributed to leading periodicals. Among her works is the Christian book Intra Muros, better known today as My Dream of Heaven. As the modern name implies, Springer claimed to have a vision of a Christian heaven, and she recounts this vision in her book as well as some personal insights.",
"Heaven's Prisoners (novel)\n Heaven's Prisoners is a crime novel written by James Lee Burke and published by Simon & Schuster in 1988. The fictional work follows Dave Robicheaux, a retired police officer and army lieutenant, who finds himself in a situation where he must protect his wife and a plane-crash survivor from a local drug kingpin. Heaven's Prisoners is the second novel by James Lee Burke featuring Dave Robicheaux, and was adapted into a film in 1996.",
"Carol Zaleski\n Lewis, Owen Barfield, Charles Williams which received laudatory reviews from The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Time, and the Los Angeles Times. Zaleski is celebrated for her writings on the afterlife, which include the Encyclopædia Britannica articles on heaven, hell, and purgatory. Journalist Lisa Miller has called her \"the mother of modern heaven studies\". Her published lectures include \"In Defense of Immortality\", which was part of the Ingersoll Lectures on Human Immortality, and the Albert Cardinal Meyer Lectures at the University of University of Saint Mary of the Lake (published as \"The Life of the World to Come\"). She writes a ",
"Jeffrey Burton Russell\n was flat. As one writer summarizes, \"Russell also examined a large selection of textbooks and found those written before 1870 usually included the correct account, but most textbooks written after 1880 uncritically repeated the erroneous claims in Washington Irving, John William Draper and Andrew Dickson White. Russell concludes that Irving, Draper and White were the main writers responsible for introducing the erroneous flat-earth myth that is still with us today.\" Russell has also written two books on the history of the notion of Heaven: A History of Heaven: The Singing Silence (1997), which deals with the period from around 200 B.C. up to Dante, and Paradise Mislaid (2006), which takes the story up to the present day.",
"The Revenge of Heaven\n names of the two interpreters Ms. Ting Kuang-sheng and Liu Kunsheng, implicitly indicating that there was no Chinese original, and the name Ken Ling as „yuan zhu“ (source material writer). In their preface, the two interpreters gratefully acknowledge Professor Ta-Ling Lee, Professor London, Miriam London and Ken Ling, whom they address as „yuan zuo-zhe“ (source material writer). “Yuan zhu” and “yuan zuo-zhe“ can be translated as “writer of source material“. The translation of the original American preface is also included. Miriam London and Ta-Ling Lee are rather inconspicuously registered in the attributions after Ken Ling as the \"source material "
] |
Who is the author of Conan the Valiant? | [
"Roland J. Green",
"Roland James Green"
] | author | Conan the Valiant | 3,776,549 | 98 | [
{
"id": "29838204",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Conan the Valiant is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1988; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1989, and was reprinted in July 2000.",
"score": "1.8547819"
},
{
"id": "2124599",
"title": "Conan the Triumphant",
"text": " Conan the Triumphant is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1983, and was reprinted in 1991; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in April 1985, and was reprinted in January 1987, May 1991 and February 2011. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in November 1985; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in April 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6408817"
},
{
"id": "1951838",
"title": "Conan the Magnificent",
"text": " Conan the Magnificent is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in May 1984, and was reprinted in December 1991; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1991. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in July 1986 and reprinted in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in February 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6330438"
},
{
"id": "29838206",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Writing of this novel, Don D'Ammassa noted that \"Green spends a lot more time on background detail than did some of Conan's chroniclers.\"",
"score": "1.63056"
},
{
"id": "2530026",
"title": "Conan the Victorious",
"text": " Conan the Victorious is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1984; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in December 1985, and was reprinted in March 1991 and August 2010. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in April 1987. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Triumphant into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6170439"
},
{
"id": "29838205",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Conan the Valiant begins in Turan, where a 22-year-old Conan is recovering from his victory over the Cult of Doom (found in Robert Jordan's Conan the Unconquered). Conan finds himself involved in court intrigue and joins forces with a sword maiden, Raihna, and her employer, a sorcerer named Illyana, in their efforts against the growing menace of an evil wizard named Eremius. Using one of the Jewels of Kurag — the other is held by Illyana — Eremius has command over his growing army of the Transformed, former humans who were mutated into reptilian demons, and is looking to conquer a large region of Turan. The combination of local villagers, Conan's sword, and Illyana's magic destroy Eremius as well as the twin Jewels.",
"score": "1.6167204"
},
{
"id": "1958314",
"title": "Conan the Great",
"text": " Conan the Great is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1990 (the 1989 date appearing on the title page verso is erroneous). It was reprinted by Tor in August 1997. It is the only one of the Tor series of Conan novels set in the period of Conan's kingship.",
"score": "1.6110612"
},
{
"id": "29943581",
"title": "Conan the Savage",
"text": " Conan the Savage is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1992; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1993, and was reprinted in March 1999.",
"score": "1.6080705"
},
{
"id": "2928467",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " not include such aids. De Camp provided chronological fixes for the first seven volumes (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Victorious), and Jordan for the first sixteen (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Valiant), with the odd exception of the eighth, Conan the Valorous. As both efforts also covered the earlier Lancer/Ace and Bantam Conan series, they also in effect provided fixes for the Bantams afterwards reissued by Tor (though they disagreed on the placement of three of these). Tor's listings in various volumes of books published in the series to date were in neither chronological nor publication order, but alphabetical by title.",
"score": "1.6075795"
},
{
"id": "1952619",
"title": "Conan the Invincible",
"text": " Conan the Invincible is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in June 1982 and reprinted in July 1990; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1998. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in August 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, July 1995).",
"score": "1.6065624"
},
{
"id": "5782992",
"title": "Conan the Hero",
"text": " Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"score": "1.595175"
},
{
"id": "12880503",
"title": "Conan and the Treasure of Python",
"text": " Conan and the Treasure of Python is a fantasy novel by American writer John Maddox Roberts, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1993; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1994.",
"score": "1.591602"
},
{
"id": "1127229",
"title": "Conan the Defender",
"text": " Conan the Defender is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in December 1982, followed by a regular paperback edition in December 1983. The book was reprinted by Tor in February 1991 and September 2009. The first British edition was published by Legend in September 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Invincible and Conan the Unconquered into the omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, 1995).",
"score": "1.5909226"
},
{
"id": "12500299",
"title": "Conan the Warrior",
"text": " Conan the Warrior is a 1967 collection of three fantasy short stories by American writer Robert E. Howard, featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The collection is introduced and edited by L. Sprague de Camp. The stories originally appeared in the fantasy magazine Weird Tales in the 1930s. The book has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers, and has also been translated into Japanese, German, French, Polish, Spanish, Swedish and Italian.",
"score": "1.5887117"
},
{
"id": "10900515",
"title": "Conan the Avenger",
"text": " Conan the Avenger is a 1968 collection of two fantasy works written by Björn Nyberg, Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Lancer Books, and has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers. It has also been translated into Japanese, German and Spanish.",
"score": "1.5883797"
},
{
"id": "2928469",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " (Apr. 1987) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Defiant (Oct. 1987) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Marauder (Jan. 1988) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Warlord (Mar. 1988) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Valiant (Oct. 1988) (by Roland Green) ; Conan the Hero (Feb. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Bold (Apr. 1989) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Great (Apr. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Indomitable (Oct. 1989) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Free Lance (Feb. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Formidable (Nov. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Guardian (Jan. 1991) (by Roland Green) ; Conan ",
"score": "1.5863678"
},
{
"id": "2928454",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " The Conan books are sword and sorcery fantasies featuring the character of Conan the Cimmerian originally created by Robert E. Howard. Written by numerous authors and issued by numerous publishers, they include both novels and short stories, the latter assembled in various combinations over the years by the several publishers. The character has proven durably popular, resulting in Conan stories being produced after Howard's death by such later writers as Poul Anderson, Leonard Carpenter, Lin Carter, L. Sprague de Camp, Roland J. Green, John C. Hocking, Robert Jordan, Sean A. Moore, Björn Nyberg, Andrew J. Offutt, Steve Perry, John Maddox Roberts, Harry Turtledove, and Karl Edward Wagner. Some of these writers finished incomplete Conan manuscripts by Howard, or rewrote Howard stories which originally featured different characters. Most post-Howard Conan stories, however, are completely original works. In total, more than fifty novels and dozens of short stories featuring the Conan character have been written by authors other than Howard. This article describes and discusses notable book editions of the Conan stories.",
"score": "1.5810077"
},
{
"id": "12880372",
"title": "Conan the Renegade",
"text": " Conan the Renegade is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1986. The first British edition was published by Sphere Books in August 1988.",
"score": "1.5804906"
},
{
"id": "2928473",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": "The Conan Chronicles (Jul. 1995 omnibus of Conan the Invincible, Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered) (by Robert Jordan) ; The Further Chronicles of Conan (Oct. 1999 omnibus of Conan the Magnificent, Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious) (by Robert Jordan) ; Sagas of Conan (Jan. 2004 omnibus of Conan the Swordsman, Conan the Liberator and Conan and the Spider God) (by L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, and Björn Nyberg) ",
"score": "1.5751224"
},
{
"id": "28585771",
"title": "The Conan Grimoire",
"text": " The book consists of thirty-seven pieces, mostly essays on fantasy writer Robert E. Howard and his seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian, Howard's sources and literary successors, and other fantasy authors such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, E. R. Eddison, Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber and Talbot Mundy. Some original material by Howard, a number of fantasy poems and a few fictional pieces are also included.",
"score": "1.5714843"
}
] | [
"Conan the Valiant\n Conan the Valiant is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1988; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1989, and was reprinted in July 2000.",
"Conan the Triumphant\n Conan the Triumphant is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1983, and was reprinted in 1991; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in April 1985, and was reprinted in January 1987, May 1991 and February 2011. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in November 1985; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in April 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Magnificent\n Conan the Magnificent is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in May 1984, and was reprinted in December 1991; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1991. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in July 1986 and reprinted in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in February 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Valiant\n Writing of this novel, Don D'Ammassa noted that \"Green spends a lot more time on background detail than did some of Conan's chroniclers.\"",
"Conan the Victorious\n Conan the Victorious is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1984; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in December 1985, and was reprinted in March 1991 and August 2010. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in April 1987. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Triumphant into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Valiant\n Conan the Valiant begins in Turan, where a 22-year-old Conan is recovering from his victory over the Cult of Doom (found in Robert Jordan's Conan the Unconquered). Conan finds himself involved in court intrigue and joins forces with a sword maiden, Raihna, and her employer, a sorcerer named Illyana, in their efforts against the growing menace of an evil wizard named Eremius. Using one of the Jewels of Kurag — the other is held by Illyana — Eremius has command over his growing army of the Transformed, former humans who were mutated into reptilian demons, and is looking to conquer a large region of Turan. The combination of local villagers, Conan's sword, and Illyana's magic destroy Eremius as well as the twin Jewels.",
"Conan the Great\n Conan the Great is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1990 (the 1989 date appearing on the title page verso is erroneous). It was reprinted by Tor in August 1997. It is the only one of the Tor series of Conan novels set in the period of Conan's kingship.",
"Conan the Savage\n Conan the Savage is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1992; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1993, and was reprinted in March 1999.",
"Conan (books)\n not include such aids. De Camp provided chronological fixes for the first seven volumes (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Victorious), and Jordan for the first sixteen (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Valiant), with the odd exception of the eighth, Conan the Valorous. As both efforts also covered the earlier Lancer/Ace and Bantam Conan series, they also in effect provided fixes for the Bantams afterwards reissued by Tor (though they disagreed on the placement of three of these). Tor's listings in various volumes of books published in the series to date were in neither chronological nor publication order, but alphabetical by title.",
"Conan the Invincible\n Conan the Invincible is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in June 1982 and reprinted in July 1990; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1998. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in August 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, July 1995).",
"Conan the Hero\n Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"Conan and the Treasure of Python\n Conan and the Treasure of Python is a fantasy novel by American writer John Maddox Roberts, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1993; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1994.",
"Conan the Defender\n Conan the Defender is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in December 1982, followed by a regular paperback edition in December 1983. The book was reprinted by Tor in February 1991 and September 2009. The first British edition was published by Legend in September 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Invincible and Conan the Unconquered into the omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, 1995).",
"Conan the Warrior\n Conan the Warrior is a 1967 collection of three fantasy short stories by American writer Robert E. Howard, featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The collection is introduced and edited by L. Sprague de Camp. The stories originally appeared in the fantasy magazine Weird Tales in the 1930s. The book has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers, and has also been translated into Japanese, German, French, Polish, Spanish, Swedish and Italian.",
"Conan the Avenger\n Conan the Avenger is a 1968 collection of two fantasy works written by Björn Nyberg, Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Lancer Books, and has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers. It has also been translated into Japanese, German and Spanish.",
"Conan (books)\n (Apr. 1987) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Defiant (Oct. 1987) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Marauder (Jan. 1988) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Warlord (Mar. 1988) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Valiant (Oct. 1988) (by Roland Green) ; Conan the Hero (Feb. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Bold (Apr. 1989) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Great (Apr. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Indomitable (Oct. 1989) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Free Lance (Feb. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Formidable (Nov. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Guardian (Jan. 1991) (by Roland Green) ; Conan ",
"Conan (books)\n The Conan books are sword and sorcery fantasies featuring the character of Conan the Cimmerian originally created by Robert E. Howard. Written by numerous authors and issued by numerous publishers, they include both novels and short stories, the latter assembled in various combinations over the years by the several publishers. The character has proven durably popular, resulting in Conan stories being produced after Howard's death by such later writers as Poul Anderson, Leonard Carpenter, Lin Carter, L. Sprague de Camp, Roland J. Green, John C. Hocking, Robert Jordan, Sean A. Moore, Björn Nyberg, Andrew J. Offutt, Steve Perry, John Maddox Roberts, Harry Turtledove, and Karl Edward Wagner. Some of these writers finished incomplete Conan manuscripts by Howard, or rewrote Howard stories which originally featured different characters. Most post-Howard Conan stories, however, are completely original works. In total, more than fifty novels and dozens of short stories featuring the Conan character have been written by authors other than Howard. This article describes and discusses notable book editions of the Conan stories.",
"Conan the Renegade\n Conan the Renegade is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1986. The first British edition was published by Sphere Books in August 1988.",
"Conan (books)\nThe Conan Chronicles (Jul. 1995 omnibus of Conan the Invincible, Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered) (by Robert Jordan) ; The Further Chronicles of Conan (Oct. 1999 omnibus of Conan the Magnificent, Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious) (by Robert Jordan) ; Sagas of Conan (Jan. 2004 omnibus of Conan the Swordsman, Conan the Liberator and Conan and the Spider God) (by L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, and Björn Nyberg) ",
"The Conan Grimoire\n The book consists of thirty-seven pieces, mostly essays on fantasy writer Robert E. Howard and his seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian, Howard's sources and literary successors, and other fantasy authors such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, E. R. Eddison, Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber and Talbot Mundy. Some original material by Howard, a number of fantasy poems and a few fictional pieces are also included."
] |
Who is the author of Darkvision? | [
"Bruce Cordell",
"Bruce Robert Cordell",
"Bruce R. Cordell"
] | author | Darkvision (novel) | 1,112,731 | 54 | [
{
"id": "26385644",
"title": "Darkvision (novel)",
"text": " Darkvision is a fantasy novel by Bruce Cordell, set in the world of the Forgotten Realms, and based on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. It is the third novel in \"The Wizards\" series. It was published in paperback in September 2006.",
"score": "1.8292879"
},
{
"id": "26385646",
"title": "Darkvision (novel)",
"text": " Pat Ferrara of mania.com comments: \"Another stand-alone novel of The Wizards series, Darkvision hits the scene under the experienced wing of Forgotten Realms guru Bruce R. Cordell.\"",
"score": "1.7568957"
},
{
"id": "26385645",
"title": "Darkvision (novel)",
"text": " Haunted by nightmares and driven by desire, Ususi ventured alone into the outside world her people abandoned centuries ago, and tracks down the relics that brought both prosperity and doom to her people.",
"score": "1.6603078"
},
{
"id": "13237809",
"title": "Dark Visions",
"text": " Dark Visions is a horror fiction compilation, with three short stories by Stephen King, three by Dan Simmons and a novella by George R. R. Martin. It was published by Orion on August 10, 1989. The collection was first published, with the same seven stories, under the title Night Visions 5, by Dark Harvest on July 1, 1988. The book was also issued under the titles Dark Love and The Skin Trade. Two of the stories by King, \"Sneakers\" and \"Dedication\", were later included in his 1993 anthology Nightmares & Dreamscapes. All three stories by Simmons were later included in his 1990 collection Prayers to Broken Stones. Martin's The Skin Trade was later included in Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads (2001) and Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective (2003).",
"score": "1.5104823"
},
{
"id": "11279613",
"title": "The Dark Design",
"text": " The Dark Design (1977) is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer, the third in the series of Riverworld books. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:",
"score": "1.5009494"
},
{
"id": "15582703",
"title": "Ulrich Kiesow",
"text": " Ulrich Kiesow was one of the co-founders of Fantasy Productions (FanPro) in 1983, together with Werner Fuchs and Hans Joachim Alpers. He was the translator of the first German language editions for both Tunnels & Trolls, which was the first German language RPG rule book, and Dungeons & Dragons. Most importantly, Kiesow was the creator of the pen and paper role-playing game The Dark Eye and its accompanying universe. Besides contributing to many publications regarding this game, Kiesow used the pseudonym Andreas Blumenkamp to write satirical articles for the now defunct German roleplaying game magazine Wunderwelten that was produced by FanPro. Kiesow suffered a severe heart attack in August 1995. While recovering he began to write the Dark Eye novel Das zerbrochene Rad (The broken wheel, a symbol for death in the universe of The Dark Eye). The novel had just been completed when Kiesow died of heart failure in his home on January 30, 1997.",
"score": "1.4946971"
},
{
"id": "15320110",
"title": "The Dark Eye (video game)",
"text": "Adventure Classic Gaming feature (2008) ; CoreGamers article and interview with creator Russell Lees (2008) ; Interview with creator Russell Lees on general development process (2009) ",
"score": "1.4774556"
},
{
"id": "2282409",
"title": "Here the Dark",
"text": " Here the Dark is a 2020 book by David Bergen. After a successful career as a novelist, Bergen returns to his original genre, short fiction. This book contains a novella and seven short stories that span his writing career. The book was shortlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020. The book won the 2021 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award.",
"score": "1.4756691"
},
{
"id": "10973029",
"title": "Rob Hood",
"text": " This collection brings together all Hood's 44 ghost stories, published from 1986 to 2015, three of them written especially for the book: \"After Image\", \"Double Speak\" and a 22,000-word novella, \"The Whimper\". Seen by the publisher as a \"reference collection\", the volume includes an introduction by World Fantasy Award-winning editor, Danel Olson, notes by the author and a bibliography that lists complete publication details, awards and commendations for each story. With the publication of this book, the publisher announced that Peripheral Visions would be the first in a new series of quality dark fiction works under the imprint Dark Phases. The book won the Australian Shadows Award for Best Collected Work of 2015. The Awards stated: \"Peripheral Visions is an ambitious project, a veritable door-stopper of a hardback comprising nearly 800 pages and 29 years of published work. Author Robert Hood demonstrates a dazzling breadth of treatments united under the overarching ghost story theme, writing with intelligence and insight\".",
"score": "1.47205"
},
{
"id": "32614332",
"title": "Andrew Paquette",
"text": "Dreamer: 20 years of psychic dreams and how they changed my life, published by O-Books/John Hunt Publishing Ltd, Winchester, UK ; Computer Graphics for Artists: an Introduction, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Computer Graphics for Artists II: Characters and Environments, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Peripheral Vision (screenplay), published by Black Coat Press in 2004. ",
"score": "1.4720106"
},
{
"id": "773271",
"title": "John Sinclair (German fiction)",
"text": " been written exclusively by Helmut Rellergerd under the nom-de-plume of Jason Dark. Only a few of the earliest stories have been written by other authors. As of late, creation of new stories is divided among Rellergerd and several new authors, each of them writing separate full episodes; the new writers are attributed for their respective stories. For example, the Oculus duology (2017) was written by Wolfgang Hohlbein, while forensic biologist Mark Benecke was the author of the novel Brandmal. Over the decades the Spanish painter Vicenç Badalona Ballestar has created numerous paintings and illustrations for the bestselling series. Other artists that contributed artworks and cover designs for John ",
"score": "1.4717623"
},
{
"id": "32617874",
"title": "Ronald Kelly",
"text": " the small press horror magazines of that era, appearing regularly in independently-published magazines such as Cemetery Dance, Deathrealm, Noctulpa, and numerous others. His first novel, Hindsight was released by Zebra Books in 1990. His audiobook collection, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, was on the nominating ballot of the 1992 Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album. Zebra published seven of Ronald Kelly's novels from 1990 to 1996. Ronald's short fiction work has been published by Cemetery Dance, Borderlands 3, Deathrealm, Dark at Heart, Hot Blood: Seeds of Fear, and many more. After selling hundreds of thousands of books, the bottom dropped ",
"score": "1.4678781"
},
{
"id": "11405904",
"title": "Video Watchdog",
"text": " As a company, Video Watchdog also published two books written by editor Lucas. The Video Watchdog Book, released September 1992, is a collection of articles, essays, and lists that originated in other magazines, including Film Comment and Fangoria. Mario Bava All the Colors of the Dark, published September 2007, is a copiously illustrated, 1128-page critical biography of Italian director and cinematographer Mario Bava. It received a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award as the Best Book of 2007, as well as an Independent Publishers Award bronze medal and a Saturn Award for Special Achievement.",
"score": "1.4656609"
},
{
"id": "29078694",
"title": "2020 Visions",
"text": " 2020 Visions (sometimes called 20/20 Visions) is a science fiction comic book written by Jamie Delano and drawn by four artists. Originally serialized as a twelve-issue full-color limited series from 1997 to 1998 at the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics, it was later collected in black-and-white in a 2004 hardcover by Cyberosia Publishing and a 2005 trade paperback by Speakeasy Comics. A new edition of the trade paperback was released in color in 2019 by ComicMix.",
"score": "1.4636792"
},
{
"id": "29057684",
"title": "Randall Dark",
"text": " Randall P. Dark is a Canadian writer, director, and producer recognized as an early proponent of HDTV.",
"score": "1.46365"
},
{
"id": "807785",
"title": "Paul Kidd",
"text": " Before pursuing a career in writing Kidd had worked at Beam Software, an Australia-based game developer. He is credited as, among other things, the writer, director and lead designer of Nightshade, an action-adventure title for the NES. He is also credited as the lead designer for Shadowrun. Kidd's first book, entitled Mus of Kerbridge, was released in 1995 and received a short-list nomination for the 1995 Aurealis Awards best fantasy novel. He has since released six more stand alone novels, written a two book series and has contributed to two of the Dungeons & Dragons novel series, Forgotten Realms: Nobles and Greyhawk. His novel releases include White Plume Mountain (WOTC), Descent into the Depths of the Earth (WOTC), A Whisper of Wings (Vision), The Rats of Acomar (Vision), The Fangs of K'aath (United Press UK), Lilith (Vision), Petal Storm (Vision), Neue Europa (Vision), and the Petal Storm graphic novel series. Kidd also has written a non-fiction strategy guide based on the video game Discworld II: Missing Presumed...!? and has written two short stories which were published in Dragon Magazine. Kidd lives in Perth, Australia.",
"score": "1.455282"
},
{
"id": "5370547",
"title": "Bill Blunden (author)",
"text": " William Alva Blunden (born December 3, 1969) is the author of several books including The Rootkit Arsenal: Escape and Evasion in the Dark Corners of the System, Behold A Pale Farce: Cyberwar, Threat Inflation & The Malware Industrial Complex, Cube Farm, and Software Exorcism. The jacket of the former work lists his credentials MCSE, MCITP, and Enterprise Administrator. He is also active in the social sciences space and helped author articles appearing in Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology.",
"score": "1.4490261"
},
{
"id": "25510165",
"title": "Bernhard Hennen",
"text": " He graduated from the University of Cologne. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers and radio stations. He began his writing career with Das Jahr des Greifen which he co-authored with Wolfgang Hohlbein in 1994. He followed up with four historical novels published 1996–1999 before returning to the fantasy genre in the 2000s. He also wrote for the role-playing game The Dark Eye.",
"score": "1.4394578"
},
{
"id": "4324879",
"title": "Fantasy Productions",
"text": " took over as Line Editor, and six months later, FanPro licensed Battletech as well and hired Randall Bills to continue with his job as Battletech Line Editor; that made Bills FanPro LLC's second and only other employee. FanPro LLC also began expanding into translations of German RPGs, their first being The Dark Eye (2003), a translation of Germany's top fantasy RPG, Das Schwarze Auge (1984) – which had recently been released in a fourth edition (2002) by the German Fantasy Productions. The Dark Eye, like FanPro's FASA lines, depended on a metaplot, this one advanced through adventures and Fantasy Productions' Aventurische Bote magazine. However, The Dark Eye did not sell ",
"score": "1.4334245"
},
{
"id": "28486577",
"title": "Double Vision (novel)",
"text": " Double Vision is a novel by Pat Barker, published in 2003. The Observer described the book as a \"strongly written, oddly constructed new novel\".",
"score": "1.4294411"
}
] | [
"Darkvision (novel)\n Darkvision is a fantasy novel by Bruce Cordell, set in the world of the Forgotten Realms, and based on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. It is the third novel in \"The Wizards\" series. It was published in paperback in September 2006.",
"Darkvision (novel)\n Pat Ferrara of mania.com comments: \"Another stand-alone novel of The Wizards series, Darkvision hits the scene under the experienced wing of Forgotten Realms guru Bruce R. Cordell.\"",
"Darkvision (novel)\n Haunted by nightmares and driven by desire, Ususi ventured alone into the outside world her people abandoned centuries ago, and tracks down the relics that brought both prosperity and doom to her people.",
"Dark Visions\n Dark Visions is a horror fiction compilation, with three short stories by Stephen King, three by Dan Simmons and a novella by George R. R. Martin. It was published by Orion on August 10, 1989. The collection was first published, with the same seven stories, under the title Night Visions 5, by Dark Harvest on July 1, 1988. The book was also issued under the titles Dark Love and The Skin Trade. Two of the stories by King, \"Sneakers\" and \"Dedication\", were later included in his 1993 anthology Nightmares & Dreamscapes. All three stories by Simmons were later included in his 1990 collection Prayers to Broken Stones. Martin's The Skin Trade was later included in Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads (2001) and Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective (2003).",
"The Dark Design\n The Dark Design (1977) is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer, the third in the series of Riverworld books. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:",
"Ulrich Kiesow\n Ulrich Kiesow was one of the co-founders of Fantasy Productions (FanPro) in 1983, together with Werner Fuchs and Hans Joachim Alpers. He was the translator of the first German language editions for both Tunnels & Trolls, which was the first German language RPG rule book, and Dungeons & Dragons. Most importantly, Kiesow was the creator of the pen and paper role-playing game The Dark Eye and its accompanying universe. Besides contributing to many publications regarding this game, Kiesow used the pseudonym Andreas Blumenkamp to write satirical articles for the now defunct German roleplaying game magazine Wunderwelten that was produced by FanPro. Kiesow suffered a severe heart attack in August 1995. While recovering he began to write the Dark Eye novel Das zerbrochene Rad (The broken wheel, a symbol for death in the universe of The Dark Eye). The novel had just been completed when Kiesow died of heart failure in his home on January 30, 1997.",
"The Dark Eye (video game)\nAdventure Classic Gaming feature (2008) ; CoreGamers article and interview with creator Russell Lees (2008) ; Interview with creator Russell Lees on general development process (2009) ",
"Here the Dark\n Here the Dark is a 2020 book by David Bergen. After a successful career as a novelist, Bergen returns to his original genre, short fiction. This book contains a novella and seven short stories that span his writing career. The book was shortlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020. The book won the 2021 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award.",
"Rob Hood\n This collection brings together all Hood's 44 ghost stories, published from 1986 to 2015, three of them written especially for the book: \"After Image\", \"Double Speak\" and a 22,000-word novella, \"The Whimper\". Seen by the publisher as a \"reference collection\", the volume includes an introduction by World Fantasy Award-winning editor, Danel Olson, notes by the author and a bibliography that lists complete publication details, awards and commendations for each story. With the publication of this book, the publisher announced that Peripheral Visions would be the first in a new series of quality dark fiction works under the imprint Dark Phases. The book won the Australian Shadows Award for Best Collected Work of 2015. The Awards stated: \"Peripheral Visions is an ambitious project, a veritable door-stopper of a hardback comprising nearly 800 pages and 29 years of published work. Author Robert Hood demonstrates a dazzling breadth of treatments united under the overarching ghost story theme, writing with intelligence and insight\".",
"Andrew Paquette\nDreamer: 20 years of psychic dreams and how they changed my life, published by O-Books/John Hunt Publishing Ltd, Winchester, UK ; Computer Graphics for Artists: an Introduction, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Computer Graphics for Artists II: Characters and Environments, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Peripheral Vision (screenplay), published by Black Coat Press in 2004. ",
"John Sinclair (German fiction)\n been written exclusively by Helmut Rellergerd under the nom-de-plume of Jason Dark. Only a few of the earliest stories have been written by other authors. As of late, creation of new stories is divided among Rellergerd and several new authors, each of them writing separate full episodes; the new writers are attributed for their respective stories. For example, the Oculus duology (2017) was written by Wolfgang Hohlbein, while forensic biologist Mark Benecke was the author of the novel Brandmal. Over the decades the Spanish painter Vicenç Badalona Ballestar has created numerous paintings and illustrations for the bestselling series. Other artists that contributed artworks and cover designs for John ",
"Ronald Kelly\n the small press horror magazines of that era, appearing regularly in independently-published magazines such as Cemetery Dance, Deathrealm, Noctulpa, and numerous others. His first novel, Hindsight was released by Zebra Books in 1990. His audiobook collection, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, was on the nominating ballot of the 1992 Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album. Zebra published seven of Ronald Kelly's novels from 1990 to 1996. Ronald's short fiction work has been published by Cemetery Dance, Borderlands 3, Deathrealm, Dark at Heart, Hot Blood: Seeds of Fear, and many more. After selling hundreds of thousands of books, the bottom dropped ",
"Video Watchdog\n As a company, Video Watchdog also published two books written by editor Lucas. The Video Watchdog Book, released September 1992, is a collection of articles, essays, and lists that originated in other magazines, including Film Comment and Fangoria. Mario Bava All the Colors of the Dark, published September 2007, is a copiously illustrated, 1128-page critical biography of Italian director and cinematographer Mario Bava. It received a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award as the Best Book of 2007, as well as an Independent Publishers Award bronze medal and a Saturn Award for Special Achievement.",
"2020 Visions\n 2020 Visions (sometimes called 20/20 Visions) is a science fiction comic book written by Jamie Delano and drawn by four artists. Originally serialized as a twelve-issue full-color limited series from 1997 to 1998 at the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics, it was later collected in black-and-white in a 2004 hardcover by Cyberosia Publishing and a 2005 trade paperback by Speakeasy Comics. A new edition of the trade paperback was released in color in 2019 by ComicMix.",
"Randall Dark\n Randall P. Dark is a Canadian writer, director, and producer recognized as an early proponent of HDTV.",
"Paul Kidd\n Before pursuing a career in writing Kidd had worked at Beam Software, an Australia-based game developer. He is credited as, among other things, the writer, director and lead designer of Nightshade, an action-adventure title for the NES. He is also credited as the lead designer for Shadowrun. Kidd's first book, entitled Mus of Kerbridge, was released in 1995 and received a short-list nomination for the 1995 Aurealis Awards best fantasy novel. He has since released six more stand alone novels, written a two book series and has contributed to two of the Dungeons & Dragons novel series, Forgotten Realms: Nobles and Greyhawk. His novel releases include White Plume Mountain (WOTC), Descent into the Depths of the Earth (WOTC), A Whisper of Wings (Vision), The Rats of Acomar (Vision), The Fangs of K'aath (United Press UK), Lilith (Vision), Petal Storm (Vision), Neue Europa (Vision), and the Petal Storm graphic novel series. Kidd also has written a non-fiction strategy guide based on the video game Discworld II: Missing Presumed...!? and has written two short stories which were published in Dragon Magazine. Kidd lives in Perth, Australia.",
"Bill Blunden (author)\n William Alva Blunden (born December 3, 1969) is the author of several books including The Rootkit Arsenal: Escape and Evasion in the Dark Corners of the System, Behold A Pale Farce: Cyberwar, Threat Inflation & The Malware Industrial Complex, Cube Farm, and Software Exorcism. The jacket of the former work lists his credentials MCSE, MCITP, and Enterprise Administrator. He is also active in the social sciences space and helped author articles appearing in Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology.",
"Bernhard Hennen\n He graduated from the University of Cologne. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers and radio stations. He began his writing career with Das Jahr des Greifen which he co-authored with Wolfgang Hohlbein in 1994. He followed up with four historical novels published 1996–1999 before returning to the fantasy genre in the 2000s. He also wrote for the role-playing game The Dark Eye.",
"Fantasy Productions\n took over as Line Editor, and six months later, FanPro licensed Battletech as well and hired Randall Bills to continue with his job as Battletech Line Editor; that made Bills FanPro LLC's second and only other employee. FanPro LLC also began expanding into translations of German RPGs, their first being The Dark Eye (2003), a translation of Germany's top fantasy RPG, Das Schwarze Auge (1984) – which had recently been released in a fourth edition (2002) by the German Fantasy Productions. The Dark Eye, like FanPro's FASA lines, depended on a metaplot, this one advanced through adventures and Fantasy Productions' Aventurische Bote magazine. However, The Dark Eye did not sell ",
"Double Vision (novel)\n Double Vision is a novel by Pat Barker, published in 2003. The Observer described the book as a \"strongly written, oddly constructed new novel\"."
] |
Who is the author of Regeneration? | [
"H. Rider Haggard",
"Henry Rider Haggard",
"Sir Henry Rider Haggard",
"H. R. Haggard",
"H Rider Haggard"
] | author | Regeneration (Haggard book) | 1,110,634 | 66 | [
{
"id": "29503755",
"title": "Regeneration (Haggard book)",
"text": " Regeneration: Being an Account of the Social Work of the Salvation Army in Great Britain is a 1910 non fiction book by H. Rider Haggard.",
"score": "1.5285629"
},
{
"id": "3715052",
"title": "Monergism",
"text": "\"Regeneration\" by J. I. Packer ",
"score": "1.4901459"
},
{
"id": "27908940",
"title": "ReGeneration (2010 film)",
"text": " The film features the participation of the late Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman, Adbusters Foundation's Kalle Lasn, Talib Kweli, STS9, Tucker Carlson and experts on media, pop culture, and education.",
"score": "1.4639049"
},
{
"id": "27908938",
"title": "ReGeneration (2010 film)",
"text": " ReGeneration is a 2010 American documentary film written and directed by Phillip Montgomery that looks at the issues facing today's youth and young adults, and the influences that contribute to America's current culture of apathy toward to political and social causes.",
"score": "1.4187096"
},
{
"id": "13958179",
"title": "Regeneration (1915 film)",
"text": " Regeneration (alternately called The Regeneration) is a 1915 American silent biographical crime drama co-written and directed by Raoul Walsh. The film, which was the first full-length feature film directed by Walsh, stars Rockliffe Fellowes and Anna Q. Nilsson and was adapted for the screen by Carl Harbaugh and Walsh from the 1903 memoir My Mamie Rose, by Owen Frawley Kildare and the adapted 1908 play by Kildare and Walter C. Hackett. Cited as one of the first full-length gangster films, Regeneration tells the story of a poor orphan who rises to control the mob until he meets a woman for whom he wants to change. TimeOut says it is notable for its \"remarkable approach to physical casting, a robust treatment of violent action, and a sheer narrative pace to shame contemporary ponderousness.\" It was feared lost until a copy was located by the Museum of Modern Art.",
"score": "1.4179623"
},
{
"id": "27908939",
"title": "ReGeneration (2010 film)",
"text": " ReGeneration was a co-production between Anonymous Content and Engine 7 Films, and premiered at the 2010 Seattle International Film Festival. The film was produced by Ryan Gosling, Matt DeRoss and Joel and Jeremy Goulder. Gosling acted as narrator for the film.",
"score": "1.4001211"
},
{
"id": "31864697",
"title": "Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove",
"text": " He has worked closely with the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II in Moral Mondays and the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival and is co-author of The Third Reconstruction: Moral Mondays, Fusion Politics, and the Rise of a New Justice Movement (Beacon Press). After the 2016 election, Wilson-Hartgrove began teaching about the legacy of slaveholder religion in American Christianity and published Reconstructing the Gospel: Finding Freedom from Slaveholder Religion (InterVarsity Press). In 2020 he published Revolution of Values (InterVarsity Press), a book that explores how the religious right taught Americans to misread the Bible as an endorsement of Christian nationalism and invites people of faith to re-read Scripture from the perspective of the poor and marginalized whom Jesus blessed.",
"score": "1.3931088"
},
{
"id": "10208967",
"title": "Rita Nakashima Brock",
"text": " in the UK as Saving Paradise: Recovering Christianity’s Forgotten Love for This Earth (Canterbury Press), it was selected as the theme book for the 2012 Greenbelt Festival in Cheltenham, England. Late in 2008, Brock began working with Gabriella Lettini on the Truth Commission on Conscience in War, which was held at the Riverside Church in New York in March 2010. In response to feedback from the Truth Commission, Brock and Lettini wrote Soul Repair: Recovering from Moral Injury After War (Beacon, 2012), one of the first books written on moral injury. Brock, with a grant from the Lilly Endowment, Inc., co-founded the Soul Repair Center in 2012 at Brite Divinity School at Texas Christian University, and directed it until May 2017.",
"score": "1.3927629"
},
{
"id": "6218522",
"title": "Seán Burke (author)",
"text": "‘The Regenerate Man’, Shorts from South Glamorgan, Tracey Walton ed., (Peterborough: Forward Press, 199 ISBN: 1 874304 55 6 ; ‘The Trials of Mahmood Mattan’ in John Williams ed., Wales, Half Welsh (London: Bloomsbury, 2004) ISBN: 0-7475-6606-2 ; ‘The Night of Nights, 1948’, Riptide, v.2 (2008) ISBN: 978-0955832604 ",
"score": "1.3916436"
},
{
"id": "5577833",
"title": "Regeneration Trilogy",
"text": "Regeneration (1991) ; The Eye in the Door (1993) ; The Ghost Road (1995) The Regeneration Trilogy is a series of three novels by Pat Barker on the subject of the First World War. In 2012, The Observer named it as one of \"The 10 best historical novels\". ",
"score": "1.3884184"
},
{
"id": "1436975",
"title": "Leon J. Wood",
"text": " Leon James Wood (1918–1977) was an American theologian. He is the author of one of the few books on the Holy Spirit as portrayed in the Old Testament as opposed to the New Testament. Wood wrote, \"The evidence that spiritual renewal, or regeneration, was true of such Old Testament people lies mainly in two directions. One is that these people lived in a way possible only for those who had experienced regeneration, and the other is the avenue of logical deduction that argues back from New Testament truth.\" According to Wood, the Scripture stated that the Holy Spirit God is omnipresent and necessary in the current age prior to the Church's Rapture and the Great Tribulation, for imparting a new life \"to those who trust Christ as their Saviour\". His action mainly differs from the past in that the Holy Spirit \"will cease one aspect of His work, namely, the restraint of sin in the world\".",
"score": "1.3876647"
},
{
"id": "5915022",
"title": "Munitionette",
"text": "Pat Barker's novel Regeneration includes a group of munitionettes who recount their experiences of war work. ",
"score": "1.3872175"
},
{
"id": "28784455",
"title": "Gary Russell",
"text": " Productions from its inception in 1998 until July 2006, when he stepped down to work for BBC Wales as a Script Editor on Doctor Who The Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood. He has written a number of Doctor Who spin-off novels and in 2000 co-wrote with executive producer Philip Segal the book Doctor Who: Regeneration (HarperCollins, ISBN: 0-00-710591-6), the making-of book of the 1996 Doctor Who television movie, as well as the TV movie's novelisation in 1996. He wrote a series of The Art of The Lord of the Rings, one per film, plus a fourth featuring material that couldn't be fitted into the individual volumes, and contributed to Gollum: ",
"score": "1.3845277"
},
{
"id": "30591743",
"title": "Resurgence & Ecologist",
"text": " Resurgence was founded in 1966 by John Papworth. Described as the artistic and spiritual voice of the green movement in Great Britain, contributors to Resurgence have included E.F. Schumacher, E. P. Thompson, Ivan Illich, R. D. Laing, Martin Ryle, Theodore Roszak, Fritjof Capra, Wendell Berry, Vandana Shiva, James Lovelock, Antony Gormley and the Dalai Lama. In September 2012, Resurgence merged with The Ecologist, resulting in the new, jointly named publication.",
"score": "1.3830701"
},
{
"id": "5102124",
"title": "Regeneration (theology)",
"text": " The Central Yearly Meeting of Friends, a Holiness Quaker denomination, teaches that regeneration is the \"divine work of initial salvation (Tit. 3:5), or conversion, which involves the accompanying works of justification (Rom. 5:18) and adoption (Rom. 8:15, 16).\" In regeneration, which occurs in the New Birth, there is a \"transformation in the heart of the believer wherein he finds himself a new creation in Christ (II Cor. 5:17; Col. 1:27).\"",
"score": "1.3731954"
},
{
"id": "28965084",
"title": "Regenerationism",
"text": " Joaquín Costa, who sought to reform Spain's democracy. He separated national life from the mere poor example set by its leaders, and summarized the national failings as: Similar views can be found in the work of the Castilian-Leonese writer José María Salaverría (1873–1940), author of Vieja España (\"Old Spain\", 1907). The ideals and proposals of the Regenerationists were seized upon by conservative politicians such as Francisco Silvela, whose famous article \"Sin pulso\" (\"Without a pulse\") was published in El Tiempo 16 August 1898, and Antonio Maura, who saw Regenerationism as a sufficient vehicle for his political aspirations. At the same time, Regenerationism was equally taken up by liberal politicians such as Santiago ",
"score": "1.3731642"
},
{
"id": "9993247",
"title": "Catherynne M. Valente",
"text": "Introduction to Jane Eyre (Illustrated) (2007) ; \"Regeneration X\" in Chicks Dig Time Lords (2010) ; Indistinguishable from Magic (2014) ",
"score": "1.3621873"
},
{
"id": "29376033",
"title": "Geoffrey Raisman",
"text": " He was chair of neural regeneration at University College London's Institute of Neurology. In 2014, his team claimed to have regrown nerve cells where they had been severed, restoring the damaged spinal cord of the Polish paraplegic Darek Fidyka.",
"score": "1.3610294"
},
{
"id": "28745495",
"title": "Regeneration (Doctor Who)",
"text": " The concept of regeneration was created in 1966 by the writers of Doctor Who as a method of replacing the leading actor. The role of the Doctor had been played by William Hartnell since the programme began in 1963 but, by 1966, it was increasingly apparent that Hartnell's health was deteriorating and he was becoming more difficult to work with. Producer John Wiles had, following several clashes with Hartnell, intended to have the actor replaced in The Celestial Toymaker; during two episodes of that serial, the Doctor is invisible (owing to Hartnell being on holiday during the recording). Wiles' plan was for the character to reappear played by a new actor. This proposal was vetoed by Gerald Savory, the BBC's Head of Serials (and Wiles' ",
"score": "1.3603437"
},
{
"id": "1695816",
"title": "List of University of Kent people",
"text": "Michael Baigent - (MA) - co-author of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail ; Valerie Bloom - poet ; Debjani Chatterjee - poet ; Fred D'Aguiar - novelist, playwright, poet, and academic ; Abdulrazak Gurnah (MA) (PhD) - academic and novelist including Paradise (Gurnah novel) and 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature winner ; Jane Harper - author The Dry ; Sir Kazuo Ishiguro - novelist, Man Booker Prize winner for The Remains of the Day and 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature winner ; E. L. James - author Fifty Shades of Grey and film producer Fifty Shades of Grey (film) ; David Mitchell - novelist Ghostwritten (novel) Cloud Atlas and Utopia Avenue screenwriter The Matrix Resurrections ; Sarah Waters - novelist Fingersmith and Tipping the Velvet ; David Wingrove - Science Fiction writer ; Frederick Kambemba Yamusangie - novelist ; Musaemura Zimunya - Zimbabwean contemporary author ",
"score": "1.3600388"
}
] | [
"Regeneration (Haggard book)\n Regeneration: Being an Account of the Social Work of the Salvation Army in Great Britain is a 1910 non fiction book by H. Rider Haggard.",
"Monergism\n\"Regeneration\" by J. I. Packer ",
"ReGeneration (2010 film)\n The film features the participation of the late Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman, Adbusters Foundation's Kalle Lasn, Talib Kweli, STS9, Tucker Carlson and experts on media, pop culture, and education.",
"ReGeneration (2010 film)\n ReGeneration is a 2010 American documentary film written and directed by Phillip Montgomery that looks at the issues facing today's youth and young adults, and the influences that contribute to America's current culture of apathy toward to political and social causes.",
"Regeneration (1915 film)\n Regeneration (alternately called The Regeneration) is a 1915 American silent biographical crime drama co-written and directed by Raoul Walsh. The film, which was the first full-length feature film directed by Walsh, stars Rockliffe Fellowes and Anna Q. Nilsson and was adapted for the screen by Carl Harbaugh and Walsh from the 1903 memoir My Mamie Rose, by Owen Frawley Kildare and the adapted 1908 play by Kildare and Walter C. Hackett. Cited as one of the first full-length gangster films, Regeneration tells the story of a poor orphan who rises to control the mob until he meets a woman for whom he wants to change. TimeOut says it is notable for its \"remarkable approach to physical casting, a robust treatment of violent action, and a sheer narrative pace to shame contemporary ponderousness.\" It was feared lost until a copy was located by the Museum of Modern Art.",
"ReGeneration (2010 film)\n ReGeneration was a co-production between Anonymous Content and Engine 7 Films, and premiered at the 2010 Seattle International Film Festival. The film was produced by Ryan Gosling, Matt DeRoss and Joel and Jeremy Goulder. Gosling acted as narrator for the film.",
"Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove\n He has worked closely with the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II in Moral Mondays and the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival and is co-author of The Third Reconstruction: Moral Mondays, Fusion Politics, and the Rise of a New Justice Movement (Beacon Press). After the 2016 election, Wilson-Hartgrove began teaching about the legacy of slaveholder religion in American Christianity and published Reconstructing the Gospel: Finding Freedom from Slaveholder Religion (InterVarsity Press). In 2020 he published Revolution of Values (InterVarsity Press), a book that explores how the religious right taught Americans to misread the Bible as an endorsement of Christian nationalism and invites people of faith to re-read Scripture from the perspective of the poor and marginalized whom Jesus blessed.",
"Rita Nakashima Brock\n in the UK as Saving Paradise: Recovering Christianity’s Forgotten Love for This Earth (Canterbury Press), it was selected as the theme book for the 2012 Greenbelt Festival in Cheltenham, England. Late in 2008, Brock began working with Gabriella Lettini on the Truth Commission on Conscience in War, which was held at the Riverside Church in New York in March 2010. In response to feedback from the Truth Commission, Brock and Lettini wrote Soul Repair: Recovering from Moral Injury After War (Beacon, 2012), one of the first books written on moral injury. Brock, with a grant from the Lilly Endowment, Inc., co-founded the Soul Repair Center in 2012 at Brite Divinity School at Texas Christian University, and directed it until May 2017.",
"Seán Burke (author)\n‘The Regenerate Man’, Shorts from South Glamorgan, Tracey Walton ed., (Peterborough: Forward Press, 199 ISBN: 1 874304 55 6 ; ‘The Trials of Mahmood Mattan’ in John Williams ed., Wales, Half Welsh (London: Bloomsbury, 2004) ISBN: 0-7475-6606-2 ; ‘The Night of Nights, 1948’, Riptide, v.2 (2008) ISBN: 978-0955832604 ",
"Regeneration Trilogy\nRegeneration (1991) ; The Eye in the Door (1993) ; The Ghost Road (1995) The Regeneration Trilogy is a series of three novels by Pat Barker on the subject of the First World War. In 2012, The Observer named it as one of \"The 10 best historical novels\". ",
"Leon J. Wood\n Leon James Wood (1918–1977) was an American theologian. He is the author of one of the few books on the Holy Spirit as portrayed in the Old Testament as opposed to the New Testament. Wood wrote, \"The evidence that spiritual renewal, or regeneration, was true of such Old Testament people lies mainly in two directions. One is that these people lived in a way possible only for those who had experienced regeneration, and the other is the avenue of logical deduction that argues back from New Testament truth.\" According to Wood, the Scripture stated that the Holy Spirit God is omnipresent and necessary in the current age prior to the Church's Rapture and the Great Tribulation, for imparting a new life \"to those who trust Christ as their Saviour\". His action mainly differs from the past in that the Holy Spirit \"will cease one aspect of His work, namely, the restraint of sin in the world\".",
"Munitionette\nPat Barker's novel Regeneration includes a group of munitionettes who recount their experiences of war work. ",
"Gary Russell\n Productions from its inception in 1998 until July 2006, when he stepped down to work for BBC Wales as a Script Editor on Doctor Who The Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood. He has written a number of Doctor Who spin-off novels and in 2000 co-wrote with executive producer Philip Segal the book Doctor Who: Regeneration (HarperCollins, ISBN: 0-00-710591-6), the making-of book of the 1996 Doctor Who television movie, as well as the TV movie's novelisation in 1996. He wrote a series of The Art of The Lord of the Rings, one per film, plus a fourth featuring material that couldn't be fitted into the individual volumes, and contributed to Gollum: ",
"Resurgence & Ecologist\n Resurgence was founded in 1966 by John Papworth. Described as the artistic and spiritual voice of the green movement in Great Britain, contributors to Resurgence have included E.F. Schumacher, E. P. Thompson, Ivan Illich, R. D. Laing, Martin Ryle, Theodore Roszak, Fritjof Capra, Wendell Berry, Vandana Shiva, James Lovelock, Antony Gormley and the Dalai Lama. In September 2012, Resurgence merged with The Ecologist, resulting in the new, jointly named publication.",
"Regeneration (theology)\n The Central Yearly Meeting of Friends, a Holiness Quaker denomination, teaches that regeneration is the \"divine work of initial salvation (Tit. 3:5), or conversion, which involves the accompanying works of justification (Rom. 5:18) and adoption (Rom. 8:15, 16).\" In regeneration, which occurs in the New Birth, there is a \"transformation in the heart of the believer wherein he finds himself a new creation in Christ (II Cor. 5:17; Col. 1:27).\"",
"Regenerationism\n Joaquín Costa, who sought to reform Spain's democracy. He separated national life from the mere poor example set by its leaders, and summarized the national failings as: Similar views can be found in the work of the Castilian-Leonese writer José María Salaverría (1873–1940), author of Vieja España (\"Old Spain\", 1907). The ideals and proposals of the Regenerationists were seized upon by conservative politicians such as Francisco Silvela, whose famous article \"Sin pulso\" (\"Without a pulse\") was published in El Tiempo 16 August 1898, and Antonio Maura, who saw Regenerationism as a sufficient vehicle for his political aspirations. At the same time, Regenerationism was equally taken up by liberal politicians such as Santiago ",
"Catherynne M. Valente\nIntroduction to Jane Eyre (Illustrated) (2007) ; \"Regeneration X\" in Chicks Dig Time Lords (2010) ; Indistinguishable from Magic (2014) ",
"Geoffrey Raisman\n He was chair of neural regeneration at University College London's Institute of Neurology. In 2014, his team claimed to have regrown nerve cells where they had been severed, restoring the damaged spinal cord of the Polish paraplegic Darek Fidyka.",
"Regeneration (Doctor Who)\n The concept of regeneration was created in 1966 by the writers of Doctor Who as a method of replacing the leading actor. The role of the Doctor had been played by William Hartnell since the programme began in 1963 but, by 1966, it was increasingly apparent that Hartnell's health was deteriorating and he was becoming more difficult to work with. Producer John Wiles had, following several clashes with Hartnell, intended to have the actor replaced in The Celestial Toymaker; during two episodes of that serial, the Doctor is invisible (owing to Hartnell being on holiday during the recording). Wiles' plan was for the character to reappear played by a new actor. This proposal was vetoed by Gerald Savory, the BBC's Head of Serials (and Wiles' ",
"List of University of Kent people\nMichael Baigent - (MA) - co-author of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail ; Valerie Bloom - poet ; Debjani Chatterjee - poet ; Fred D'Aguiar - novelist, playwright, poet, and academic ; Abdulrazak Gurnah (MA) (PhD) - academic and novelist including Paradise (Gurnah novel) and 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature winner ; Jane Harper - author The Dry ; Sir Kazuo Ishiguro - novelist, Man Booker Prize winner for The Remains of the Day and 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature winner ; E. L. James - author Fifty Shades of Grey and film producer Fifty Shades of Grey (film) ; David Mitchell - novelist Ghostwritten (novel) Cloud Atlas and Utopia Avenue screenwriter The Matrix Resurrections ; Sarah Waters - novelist Fingersmith and Tipping the Velvet ; David Wingrove - Science Fiction writer ; Frederick Kambemba Yamusangie - novelist ; Musaemura Zimunya - Zimbabwean contemporary author "
] |
Who is the author of The Latimers? | [
"Henry Christopher McCook",
"McCook"
] | author | The Latimers | 5,937,197 | 75 | [
{
"id": "3314667",
"title": "Jonathan Latimer",
"text": " None known",
"score": "1.7060792"
},
{
"id": "12043290",
"title": "The Latimers",
"text": " The Latimers : A Tale of the Western Insurrection of 1794 is an historical novel by the American writer and Presbyterian clergyman Henry Christopher McCook (1837–1911) set in 1790s Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The novel tells the story of Scotch-Irish American pioneers during the Whiskey Rebellion.",
"score": "1.5603468"
},
{
"id": "3314660",
"title": "Jonathan Latimer",
"text": " Jonathan Wyatt Latimer (October 23, 1906 – June 23, 1983) was an American crime writer known his novels and screenplays. Before becoming an author, Latimer was a journalist in Chicago.",
"score": "1.540185"
},
{
"id": "3314662",
"title": "Jonathan Latimer",
"text": " Latimer became a journalist at the Chicago Herald Examiner and later for the Chicago Tribune, writing about crime and meeting Al Capone and Bugs Moran, among others. In the mid-1930s, he turned to writing fiction, starting with a series of novels featuring private eye William Crane, in which he introduced his typical blend of hardboiled crime fiction and elements of screwball comedy.",
"score": "1.5260704"
},
{
"id": "4434369",
"title": "Lewis Howard Latimer",
"text": "A book of poetry called Poems of Love and Life. ; A technical book, Incandescent Electric Lighting (1890). ; Various pieces for African-American journals. ; A petition to Mayor Seth Low to restore a member to the Brooklyn School Board. Latimer played the violin and flute, painted portraits and wrote plays. He was an early advocate of civil rights. In 1895 Lewis wrote a statement in connection with the National Conference of Colored Men about equality, security, and opportunity.",
"score": "1.5109015"
},
{
"id": "9604969",
"title": "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer",
"text": " Mary Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer (July 26, 1822 – January 4, 1904 ) was an English-American writer, both of original works and translations.",
"score": "1.4862697"
},
{
"id": "9321409",
"title": "Jon Latimer",
"text": " Jonathan David Latimer (1964 – 4 January 2009) was an historian and writer based in Wales. His books include Operation Compass 1940 (Osprey, 2000), Tobruk 1941 (Osprey, 2001), Deception in War (John Murray, 2001), Alamein (John Murray, 2002), Burma: The Forgotten War (John Murray, 2004) and 1812: War with America (Harvard University Press, 2007) which won a Distinguished Book Award from the Society for Military History and was shortlisted for the George Washington Book Prize. Born in Prestatyn, Wales, Latimer was educated at Christleton County High School, Chester. He studied for a geography degree at University College, Swansea but switched course to graduate in oceanography. He worked as an oceanographer until becoming a full-time writer in 1997. In 2003, he became an honorary research fellow at his alma mater (by this time Swansea University) and was appointed as a part-time lecturer in history on the BA (Hons) degree ",
"score": "1.4641856"
},
{
"id": "14238804",
"title": "Alan Noel Latimer Munby",
"text": " Alan Noel Latimer ('Tim') Munby (1913–1974) was an English author, writer and librarian.",
"score": "1.4597723"
},
{
"id": "9362689",
"title": "Latimer (surname)",
"text": " Latimer is the surname of:",
"score": "1.4595509"
},
{
"id": "26966025",
"title": "Margery Latimer",
"text": " Margery Bodine Latimer (February 6, 1899 – August 16, 1932), born in Portage, Wisconsin, was an American writer, feminist theorist, and social activist. She moved to New York City before finishing college and became involved in its cultural life. Latimer published two highly acclaimed novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), and two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). (This was reprinted in a new edition in 1984.) Her formally experimental fiction was greatly influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Her work reflects her feminist, socialist, and anti-racist ideals.",
"score": "1.4567642"
},
{
"id": "26966028",
"title": "Margery Latimer",
"text": " Before her first novel was published in 1928, Latimer had stories published in Century, The American Caravan, The Bookman (New York) and other journals. Her essay, \"The New Freedom\", was published in 1924 in The Reviewer. According to scholar Joy Castro, it casts women as \"potential literary progenitors.\" Latimer writes of \"the word ... made flesh, and it is flesh with a mind of its own, infused with the possibility of change...\" Latimer's novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), were highly acclaimed. Her debut novel received notices in the New York Times, McCall's, The Saturday Review of Literature, Chicago Tribune, and others. In addition, she published two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). Her fiction was considered formally experimental and influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Latimer expressed her principles of feminism, socialism, and anti-racism in her work. ",
"score": "1.4489276"
},
{
"id": "365499",
"title": "Latimer Trust",
"text": " Since 2001 the Trust has resumed its publishing activities, and maintains the interest in research by funding posts and offering small grants. The first Director of Research (2006- ) is Gerald Bray; Research Fellows have been Matthew Sleeman (2001-5), Andrew Atherstone (2005- ) and Kirsten Birkett (2013-). The Trust has been approached by international organisations to publish significant works, such as ‘Being Faithful’ and its predecessor, ‘The Way, The Truth and the Life’ for GAFCON (now the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans ).",
"score": "1.4331679"
},
{
"id": "3314666",
"title": "Jonathan Latimer",
"text": "Dark Memory (1940) ",
"score": "1.430378"
},
{
"id": "32429059",
"title": "Caroline Latimer",
"text": " Caroline Wormeley Latimer (March 28, 1860 – 1933) was an American physiologist known for her studies of rigor mortis and the salivary glands, and her popular science writing, which was widely read by women and girls.",
"score": "1.4280062"
},
{
"id": "14782836",
"title": "Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer",
"text": " \"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\" is a 2013 fantasy story by Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published in the Mythic Delirium Books anthology Clockwork Phoenix 4. An audio version was subsequently released on PodCastle, read by Peter Wood.",
"score": "1.424462"
},
{
"id": "31344258",
"title": "George Latimer Apperson",
"text": " The following list has come from a search on the Jisc Library Hub Discover database., with details checked by looking at advertisements and reviews for the works at the time of publication in the British Newspaper Archive.",
"score": "1.411425"
},
{
"id": "26966026",
"title": "Margery Latimer",
"text": " Latimer was the younger daughter of Clark Watt Latimer and Laura Augusta née Bodine. Her Yankee ancestry included New England pioneers Anne Bradstreet and John Cotton. Latimer published a short story in a local paper in 1917. This caught the attention of her Portage neighbor Zona Gale, a well-known writer, journalist, and suffragist. Gale became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama. She became Latimer's mentor and confidante. Latimer attended Wooster College, but withdrew quickly, then attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She withdrew again and moved to New York City, where she started a playwriting course at Columbia University. Gale established a Zona Gale scholarship, tailor-made for Latimer, its first recipient. The younger woman returned to the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1922. She worked on the campus literary magazine as editor and contributor, and became part of a circle of writers there. She withdrew ",
"score": "1.4087911"
},
{
"id": "9604971",
"title": "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer",
"text": " She was educated by tutors and at a school in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Early travels also helped educate her. She spent the winter of 1842 in Boston as the guest of the family of George Ticknor, and in that environment received much encouragement of her interest in literature. The daughter resided several years in Newport, Rhode Island, and in 1856, after gaining a reputation as a writer. After spending several years raising her children, she began writing again in 1876.",
"score": "1.4049294"
},
{
"id": "31353349",
"title": "Matt Latimer",
"text": " Latimer married Anna (née Sproul) in 2012. Sproul is a literary agent and graduate of Columbia University and the University of Oxford.",
"score": "1.3991632"
},
{
"id": "10898215",
"title": "List of English writers (K–Q)",
"text": " writer • Emilia Lanier or Lanyer, (1569–1645) poet • R. F. Langley (1938–2011), poet • Nathaniel Lardner (1684–1768), theologian • Philip Larkin (1922–1985), poet • Michael Laskey (born 1944), poet and editor • Harold Laski (1893–1950), political writer • Marghanita Laski (1915–1988), novelist and broadcaster • David Lassman (born 1963), writer and scriptwriter • Francis Lathom (1774–1832), novelist and playwright • Hugh Latimer (c. 1487–1555), preacher, bishop and martyr • William Laud (1573–1645), theologian, archbishop and martyr • Hugh Laurie (born 1959), novelist and actor • William Law (1686–1761), theologian. • D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930), novelist and poet, Sons and ",
"score": "1.3967888"
}
] | [
"Jonathan Latimer\n None known",
"The Latimers\n The Latimers : A Tale of the Western Insurrection of 1794 is an historical novel by the American writer and Presbyterian clergyman Henry Christopher McCook (1837–1911) set in 1790s Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The novel tells the story of Scotch-Irish American pioneers during the Whiskey Rebellion.",
"Jonathan Latimer\n Jonathan Wyatt Latimer (October 23, 1906 – June 23, 1983) was an American crime writer known his novels and screenplays. Before becoming an author, Latimer was a journalist in Chicago.",
"Jonathan Latimer\n Latimer became a journalist at the Chicago Herald Examiner and later for the Chicago Tribune, writing about crime and meeting Al Capone and Bugs Moran, among others. In the mid-1930s, he turned to writing fiction, starting with a series of novels featuring private eye William Crane, in which he introduced his typical blend of hardboiled crime fiction and elements of screwball comedy.",
"Lewis Howard Latimer\nA book of poetry called Poems of Love and Life. ; A technical book, Incandescent Electric Lighting (1890). ; Various pieces for African-American journals. ; A petition to Mayor Seth Low to restore a member to the Brooklyn School Board. Latimer played the violin and flute, painted portraits and wrote plays. He was an early advocate of civil rights. In 1895 Lewis wrote a statement in connection with the National Conference of Colored Men about equality, security, and opportunity.",
"Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer\n Mary Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer (July 26, 1822 – January 4, 1904 ) was an English-American writer, both of original works and translations.",
"Jon Latimer\n Jonathan David Latimer (1964 – 4 January 2009) was an historian and writer based in Wales. His books include Operation Compass 1940 (Osprey, 2000), Tobruk 1941 (Osprey, 2001), Deception in War (John Murray, 2001), Alamein (John Murray, 2002), Burma: The Forgotten War (John Murray, 2004) and 1812: War with America (Harvard University Press, 2007) which won a Distinguished Book Award from the Society for Military History and was shortlisted for the George Washington Book Prize. Born in Prestatyn, Wales, Latimer was educated at Christleton County High School, Chester. He studied for a geography degree at University College, Swansea but switched course to graduate in oceanography. He worked as an oceanographer until becoming a full-time writer in 1997. In 2003, he became an honorary research fellow at his alma mater (by this time Swansea University) and was appointed as a part-time lecturer in history on the BA (Hons) degree ",
"Alan Noel Latimer Munby\n Alan Noel Latimer ('Tim') Munby (1913–1974) was an English author, writer and librarian.",
"Latimer (surname)\n Latimer is the surname of:",
"Margery Latimer\n Margery Bodine Latimer (February 6, 1899 – August 16, 1932), born in Portage, Wisconsin, was an American writer, feminist theorist, and social activist. She moved to New York City before finishing college and became involved in its cultural life. Latimer published two highly acclaimed novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), and two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). (This was reprinted in a new edition in 1984.) Her formally experimental fiction was greatly influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Her work reflects her feminist, socialist, and anti-racist ideals.",
"Margery Latimer\n Before her first novel was published in 1928, Latimer had stories published in Century, The American Caravan, The Bookman (New York) and other journals. Her essay, \"The New Freedom\", was published in 1924 in The Reviewer. According to scholar Joy Castro, it casts women as \"potential literary progenitors.\" Latimer writes of \"the word ... made flesh, and it is flesh with a mind of its own, infused with the possibility of change...\" Latimer's novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), were highly acclaimed. Her debut novel received notices in the New York Times, McCall's, The Saturday Review of Literature, Chicago Tribune, and others. In addition, she published two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). Her fiction was considered formally experimental and influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Latimer expressed her principles of feminism, socialism, and anti-racism in her work. ",
"Latimer Trust\n Since 2001 the Trust has resumed its publishing activities, and maintains the interest in research by funding posts and offering small grants. The first Director of Research (2006- ) is Gerald Bray; Research Fellows have been Matthew Sleeman (2001-5), Andrew Atherstone (2005- ) and Kirsten Birkett (2013-). The Trust has been approached by international organisations to publish significant works, such as ‘Being Faithful’ and its predecessor, ‘The Way, The Truth and the Life’ for GAFCON (now the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans ).",
"Jonathan Latimer\nDark Memory (1940) ",
"Caroline Latimer\n Caroline Wormeley Latimer (March 28, 1860 – 1933) was an American physiologist known for her studies of rigor mortis and the salivary glands, and her popular science writing, which was widely read by women and girls.",
"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\n \"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\" is a 2013 fantasy story by Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published in the Mythic Delirium Books anthology Clockwork Phoenix 4. An audio version was subsequently released on PodCastle, read by Peter Wood.",
"George Latimer Apperson\n The following list has come from a search on the Jisc Library Hub Discover database., with details checked by looking at advertisements and reviews for the works at the time of publication in the British Newspaper Archive.",
"Margery Latimer\n Latimer was the younger daughter of Clark Watt Latimer and Laura Augusta née Bodine. Her Yankee ancestry included New England pioneers Anne Bradstreet and John Cotton. Latimer published a short story in a local paper in 1917. This caught the attention of her Portage neighbor Zona Gale, a well-known writer, journalist, and suffragist. Gale became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama. She became Latimer's mentor and confidante. Latimer attended Wooster College, but withdrew quickly, then attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She withdrew again and moved to New York City, where she started a playwriting course at Columbia University. Gale established a Zona Gale scholarship, tailor-made for Latimer, its first recipient. The younger woman returned to the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1922. She worked on the campus literary magazine as editor and contributor, and became part of a circle of writers there. She withdrew ",
"Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer\n She was educated by tutors and at a school in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Early travels also helped educate her. She spent the winter of 1842 in Boston as the guest of the family of George Ticknor, and in that environment received much encouragement of her interest in literature. The daughter resided several years in Newport, Rhode Island, and in 1856, after gaining a reputation as a writer. After spending several years raising her children, she began writing again in 1876.",
"Matt Latimer\n Latimer married Anna (née Sproul) in 2012. Sproul is a literary agent and graduate of Columbia University and the University of Oxford.",
"List of English writers (K–Q)\n writer • Emilia Lanier or Lanyer, (1569–1645) poet • R. F. Langley (1938–2011), poet • Nathaniel Lardner (1684–1768), theologian • Philip Larkin (1922–1985), poet • Michael Laskey (born 1944), poet and editor • Harold Laski (1893–1950), political writer • Marghanita Laski (1915–1988), novelist and broadcaster • David Lassman (born 1963), writer and scriptwriter • Francis Lathom (1774–1832), novelist and playwright • Hugh Latimer (c. 1487–1555), preacher, bishop and martyr • William Laud (1573–1645), theologian, archbishop and martyr • Hugh Laurie (born 1959), novelist and actor • William Law (1686–1761), theologian. • D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930), novelist and poet, Sons and "
] |
Who is the author of Saint? | [
"Lino Rulli"
] | author | Saint (book) | 1,114,616 | 29 | [
{
"id": "13038008",
"title": "Saint (book)",
"text": " Saint: Why I Should Be Canonized Right Away is a book written by American Catholic radio host Lino Rulli. It was released on September 3, 2013 and is the sequel to Rulli's 2011 book, Sinner.",
"score": "1.6220403"
},
{
"id": "11795338",
"title": "Saint (novel)",
"text": " Saint is a 2006 mystery novel written by Ted Dekker. It is the second in the series of the 'Project Showdown' Books which are also called 'The Paradise Novels'.",
"score": "1.6030797"
},
{
"id": "4074573",
"title": "The Saint (novel)",
"text": " The Saint is a mystery novel by Burl Barer published by Pocket Books in 1997. It was based upon the screenplay for the film The Saint, which in turn was loosely based upon the character Simon Templar, created by Leslie Charteris. Val Kilmer portrayed Templar and is pictured on the book's front cover. This was the first book featuring Templar since Salvage for the Saint ended the original series of books (which began in 1928) in 1983. It is also the first Saint story to be published since Charteris' death in 1993 and the first to not be published by either Hodder & Stoughton (UK) or The Crime Club (US). Barer wrote the book based upon the screenplay by Jonathan Hensleigh and Wesley Strick. Barer himself ",
"score": "1.5705456"
},
{
"id": "13826488",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " A novelization based upon the film script was written by Burl Barer.",
"score": "1.5457745"
},
{
"id": "11795345",
"title": "Saint (novel)",
"text": " Saint is the second published novel in the Project Showdown series, which are also known as the Paradise Novels. Even though the books are their own series, Showdown, Saint, and Sinner are a part of what is referred to as the Books of History Chronicles. In the Circle Trilogy, a man named Thomas Hunter discovers an alternate universe containing Books of History, which make anything written in them come true as long as the writer has the faith of a child. 30 years later, Showdown takes place. Saint and then Sinner take place 15 years after that. Both House and Skin are directly tied into the Paradise Novels. Barsidious White (the antagonist in House) was created by Marsuvees Black (from ",
"score": "1.5186424"
},
{
"id": "5851508",
"title": "Saint (manhua)",
"text": " Saint is a manhua by Hong Kong comics artist Khoo Fuk Lung. It follows the life and adventures of Sun Wukong, the monkey king from the 16th century novel Journey to the West. It was first published by Jade Dynasty and is licensed by Yuk Long Limited.",
"score": "1.4839202"
},
{
"id": "4217262",
"title": "Paul Elie",
"text": "A Tremor of Bliss: Contemporary Writing on the Saints, editor, nonfiction (New York: Harcourt, 1994). ; The Life You Save May Be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage, biography (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003). ; Reinventing Bach, nonfiction (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012). ",
"score": "1.4624016"
},
{
"id": "5424990",
"title": "The Saint's Lady",
"text": " The Saint's Lady is an unpublished novel by Joy Martin featuring the character of criminal-turned-detective Simon Templar (alias \"The Saint\") who had been created by Leslie Charteris in 1928. According to the book The Saint: A Complete History in Print, Radio, Film and Television 1928-1992 by Burl Barer, Martin sent her manuscript to Leslie Charteris as a present in 1979. On its own, this would qualify the novel as no more than fan fiction. However Charteris, who at the time was editing a series of continuation books featuring The Saint (he had stopped writing the character full-time in 1963) was impressed enough by the manuscript to offer it to the British publishers of the Saint series, Hodder & Stoughton, for publication as the next book in the ",
"score": "1.449714"
},
{
"id": "16243491",
"title": "Vendetta for the Saint",
"text": " The novel is credited to Leslie Charteris, who created the Saint in 1928, but the book was actually authored by Harry Harrison, a noted science fiction author who also wrote the syndicated Saint comic strip. Although Harrison wrote the majority of the book as a ghost writer, he indicates in an interview that Charteris did contribute to the final book (albeit in a very minor way).. The reference work The Saint: A Complete History by Burl Barer, however, indicates that Charteris was heavily involved in editing the book. Vendetta was the first Saint volume published after Charteris chose to step back from actively writing the adventures, and were followed by a number of books credited to Charteris but actually written by other authors. Charteris remained as editor of the books, approving stories and revising material when needed. These books were mostly based upon teleplays from the TV series or scenarios from the comic strip; the next wholly original Saint literary stories were not published until the novella collection Catch the Saint more than a decade later.",
"score": "1.4439225"
},
{
"id": "2927311",
"title": "Theodore Stratelates",
"text": "Book of Saints, The \"A dictionary of servants of God canonised by the Catholic church\" compiled by the Benedictine monks of St Augustine's Abbey, Ramsgate (6th edition, revised & rest, 1989) ; Butler's Lives of the Saints (originally compiled by the Revd Alban Butler 1756/59) Delaney, John J: Dictionary of Saints (1982) ; Delehaye, Hippolyte: Les Legendes Grecques des Saints Militaires (Paris.1909) ; Demus, Otto: The Church of San Marco in Venice (Washington 1960) ; Demus, Otto: The Mosaics of San Marco in Venice (4 volumes) 1 The Eleventh & Twelfth Centuries - Text (1984) ; Farmer, David: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (4th edition, 1997) ; Grotowski, Piotr: Arms and Armour of the Warrior Saints: Tradition and Innovation in Byzantine Iconography (843–1261) (Leiden 2010) ; The Oxford Companion to the Year (by Bonnie Blackburn & Leofranc Holford-Stevens) (Oxford 1999) ; Walter, Christopher: The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition (2003) ; Oikonomidès, N.: Le dédoublement de saint Théodore et les villes d΄ `Euhaïta et d΄ `Euchaneia, Analecta Bollandiana 104 (1986) p. 327-335. ",
"score": "1.4399054"
},
{
"id": "9315078",
"title": "Steve Saint",
"text": "Jungle Pilot: The Story Continues (1997), epilogue to the updated edition of Jungle Pilot: The Gripping Story of the Life and Witness of Nate Saint, Martyred Missionary to Ecuador by Russell T. Hitt, (1957). ; List of books by John Piper|Suffering and the Sovereignty of God (2006), by John Piper. ",
"score": "1.4397936"
},
{
"id": "15940560",
"title": "Enter the Saint",
"text": " of the United Kingdom, the first of what would be many international Saint adventures, although it wouldn't be until \"The Wonderful War\", a story in the Featuring the Saint collection, that a story would be completely set outside of the country. Enter the Saint is a collection of three interconnected adventure novellas by Leslie Charteris first published in the United Kingdom by Hodder and Stoughton in October 1930, followed by an American edition by The Crime Club in April 1931. This was the second book featuring the adventures of Charteris' Robin Hood-inspired anti-hero, Simon Templar, alias \"The Saint\". It followed the 1928 novel, Meet the Tiger which introduced the character. ",
"score": "1.4389118"
},
{
"id": "14413902",
"title": "The Saint and The Sow",
"text": " The Saint and The Sow (\"O Santo e a Porca\", in the original title) is a very popular Brazilian play written by Ariano Suassuna that was first published in 1957. The play, according to Suassuna, is a \"Northeastern imitation\" from the play Aulularia (a.k.a. The Pot's Comedy), from the Roman writer Plautus.",
"score": "1.4380499"
},
{
"id": "16434575",
"title": "Anesius",
"text": "Holweck, F. G. A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1924. ",
"score": "1.4349482"
},
{
"id": "5424992",
"title": "The Saint's Lady",
"text": " she would have received author credit on the cover as at this time the practice was for the books to be credited to Charteris (with the collaborative authors credited inside). This is not the only Saint novel to remain unpublished. Barer also provides an outline of Bet on the Saint, a 1968 collaboration between Charteris and Fleming Lee based on a Saint comic strip storyline, which was rejected by Doubleday (Charteris' American publishers). And, recently, an unpublished Charteris manuscript from the early 1940s, The Saint's Second Front, has been discovered. Also, according to \"The Saintly Bible\", Ian Dickerson was at one time developing a novel out of an unrealized film project entitled Son of the Saint. As of 2020 this book has yet to see print.",
"score": "1.4343852"
},
{
"id": "4074574",
"title": "The Saint (novel)",
"text": " a longtime fan of the Saint books and in 1993 had published a comprehensive study on the many literary, radio, and television stories featuring the character of Simon Templar. Barer uses as a framing sequence around his historical work then-current plans to launch a new film series based upon the Saint; these plans ultimately failed and the 1997 film resulted. The film only loosely adapted the Simon Templar character, making many wholesale changes to the concept of The Saint and Templar; Barer nonetheless incorporated elements from Charteris into his manuscript, including characters from past Saint books such as Roger Conway. Barer would go on to write an original Saint novel (more closely related to the character) entitled Capture the Saint, which was also published in 1997.",
"score": "1.4340227"
},
{
"id": "3377562",
"title": "The Saint (radio program)",
"text": " The Saint was a radio adventure program in the United States that featured a character (\"a swashbuckling, devil-may-care [wikt] Robin Hood type who, in his attempt to help people, remained just one step ahead of the police and crooks—both of whom he combatted\") created by author Leslie Charteris. As the program's introduction said, The Saint (the alias of Simon Templar), was \"known to millions from books, magazines, and motion pictures.\" Several versions of the program appeared on different networks.",
"score": "1.4278015"
},
{
"id": "3689620",
"title": "Alphonsus Rodriguez",
"text": "Holweck, F. G., A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1924. ",
"score": "1.4244972"
},
{
"id": "1797824",
"title": "John Kruse",
"text": " John Kruse (1921–2004) was an English film and television screenwriter, director and novelist. He is mostly remembered for his work on ITC classic TV series The Saint, as well as several films of the franchise, and as the author of the best-selling novel Red Omega.",
"score": "1.4244125"
},
{
"id": "29909442",
"title": "List of Old Rossallians",
"text": "J. R. Ackerley – author, editor, and memoirist ; Leslie Charteris – creator of The Saint ; J.G. Farrell – novelist and winner of the Booker Prize ; R. Welldon Finn – historical writer ; F. W. Harvey, DCM – poet ; Raymond M. Patterson – explorer and travel writer ; Clive Phillipps-Wolley – author and big game hunter ",
"score": "1.4220366"
}
] | [
"Saint (book)\n Saint: Why I Should Be Canonized Right Away is a book written by American Catholic radio host Lino Rulli. It was released on September 3, 2013 and is the sequel to Rulli's 2011 book, Sinner.",
"Saint (novel)\n Saint is a 2006 mystery novel written by Ted Dekker. It is the second in the series of the 'Project Showdown' Books which are also called 'The Paradise Novels'.",
"The Saint (novel)\n The Saint is a mystery novel by Burl Barer published by Pocket Books in 1997. It was based upon the screenplay for the film The Saint, which in turn was loosely based upon the character Simon Templar, created by Leslie Charteris. Val Kilmer portrayed Templar and is pictured on the book's front cover. This was the first book featuring Templar since Salvage for the Saint ended the original series of books (which began in 1928) in 1983. It is also the first Saint story to be published since Charteris' death in 1993 and the first to not be published by either Hodder & Stoughton (UK) or The Crime Club (US). Barer wrote the book based upon the screenplay by Jonathan Hensleigh and Wesley Strick. Barer himself ",
"The Saint (1997 film)\n A novelization based upon the film script was written by Burl Barer.",
"Saint (novel)\n Saint is the second published novel in the Project Showdown series, which are also known as the Paradise Novels. Even though the books are their own series, Showdown, Saint, and Sinner are a part of what is referred to as the Books of History Chronicles. In the Circle Trilogy, a man named Thomas Hunter discovers an alternate universe containing Books of History, which make anything written in them come true as long as the writer has the faith of a child. 30 years later, Showdown takes place. Saint and then Sinner take place 15 years after that. Both House and Skin are directly tied into the Paradise Novels. Barsidious White (the antagonist in House) was created by Marsuvees Black (from ",
"Saint (manhua)\n Saint is a manhua by Hong Kong comics artist Khoo Fuk Lung. It follows the life and adventures of Sun Wukong, the monkey king from the 16th century novel Journey to the West. It was first published by Jade Dynasty and is licensed by Yuk Long Limited.",
"Paul Elie\nA Tremor of Bliss: Contemporary Writing on the Saints, editor, nonfiction (New York: Harcourt, 1994). ; The Life You Save May Be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage, biography (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003). ; Reinventing Bach, nonfiction (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012). ",
"The Saint's Lady\n The Saint's Lady is an unpublished novel by Joy Martin featuring the character of criminal-turned-detective Simon Templar (alias \"The Saint\") who had been created by Leslie Charteris in 1928. According to the book The Saint: A Complete History in Print, Radio, Film and Television 1928-1992 by Burl Barer, Martin sent her manuscript to Leslie Charteris as a present in 1979. On its own, this would qualify the novel as no more than fan fiction. However Charteris, who at the time was editing a series of continuation books featuring The Saint (he had stopped writing the character full-time in 1963) was impressed enough by the manuscript to offer it to the British publishers of the Saint series, Hodder & Stoughton, for publication as the next book in the ",
"Vendetta for the Saint\n The novel is credited to Leslie Charteris, who created the Saint in 1928, but the book was actually authored by Harry Harrison, a noted science fiction author who also wrote the syndicated Saint comic strip. Although Harrison wrote the majority of the book as a ghost writer, he indicates in an interview that Charteris did contribute to the final book (albeit in a very minor way).. The reference work The Saint: A Complete History by Burl Barer, however, indicates that Charteris was heavily involved in editing the book. Vendetta was the first Saint volume published after Charteris chose to step back from actively writing the adventures, and were followed by a number of books credited to Charteris but actually written by other authors. Charteris remained as editor of the books, approving stories and revising material when needed. These books were mostly based upon teleplays from the TV series or scenarios from the comic strip; the next wholly original Saint literary stories were not published until the novella collection Catch the Saint more than a decade later.",
"Theodore Stratelates\nBook of Saints, The \"A dictionary of servants of God canonised by the Catholic church\" compiled by the Benedictine monks of St Augustine's Abbey, Ramsgate (6th edition, revised & rest, 1989) ; Butler's Lives of the Saints (originally compiled by the Revd Alban Butler 1756/59) Delaney, John J: Dictionary of Saints (1982) ; Delehaye, Hippolyte: Les Legendes Grecques des Saints Militaires (Paris.1909) ; Demus, Otto: The Church of San Marco in Venice (Washington 1960) ; Demus, Otto: The Mosaics of San Marco in Venice (4 volumes) 1 The Eleventh & Twelfth Centuries - Text (1984) ; Farmer, David: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (4th edition, 1997) ; Grotowski, Piotr: Arms and Armour of the Warrior Saints: Tradition and Innovation in Byzantine Iconography (843–1261) (Leiden 2010) ; The Oxford Companion to the Year (by Bonnie Blackburn & Leofranc Holford-Stevens) (Oxford 1999) ; Walter, Christopher: The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition (2003) ; Oikonomidès, N.: Le dédoublement de saint Théodore et les villes d΄ `Euhaïta et d΄ `Euchaneia, Analecta Bollandiana 104 (1986) p. 327-335. ",
"Steve Saint\nJungle Pilot: The Story Continues (1997), epilogue to the updated edition of Jungle Pilot: The Gripping Story of the Life and Witness of Nate Saint, Martyred Missionary to Ecuador by Russell T. Hitt, (1957). ; List of books by John Piper|Suffering and the Sovereignty of God (2006), by John Piper. ",
"Enter the Saint\n of the United Kingdom, the first of what would be many international Saint adventures, although it wouldn't be until \"The Wonderful War\", a story in the Featuring the Saint collection, that a story would be completely set outside of the country. Enter the Saint is a collection of three interconnected adventure novellas by Leslie Charteris first published in the United Kingdom by Hodder and Stoughton in October 1930, followed by an American edition by The Crime Club in April 1931. This was the second book featuring the adventures of Charteris' Robin Hood-inspired anti-hero, Simon Templar, alias \"The Saint\". It followed the 1928 novel, Meet the Tiger which introduced the character. ",
"The Saint and The Sow\n The Saint and The Sow (\"O Santo e a Porca\", in the original title) is a very popular Brazilian play written by Ariano Suassuna that was first published in 1957. The play, according to Suassuna, is a \"Northeastern imitation\" from the play Aulularia (a.k.a. The Pot's Comedy), from the Roman writer Plautus.",
"Anesius\nHolweck, F. G. A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1924. ",
"The Saint's Lady\n she would have received author credit on the cover as at this time the practice was for the books to be credited to Charteris (with the collaborative authors credited inside). This is not the only Saint novel to remain unpublished. Barer also provides an outline of Bet on the Saint, a 1968 collaboration between Charteris and Fleming Lee based on a Saint comic strip storyline, which was rejected by Doubleday (Charteris' American publishers). And, recently, an unpublished Charteris manuscript from the early 1940s, The Saint's Second Front, has been discovered. Also, according to \"The Saintly Bible\", Ian Dickerson was at one time developing a novel out of an unrealized film project entitled Son of the Saint. As of 2020 this book has yet to see print.",
"The Saint (novel)\n a longtime fan of the Saint books and in 1993 had published a comprehensive study on the many literary, radio, and television stories featuring the character of Simon Templar. Barer uses as a framing sequence around his historical work then-current plans to launch a new film series based upon the Saint; these plans ultimately failed and the 1997 film resulted. The film only loosely adapted the Simon Templar character, making many wholesale changes to the concept of The Saint and Templar; Barer nonetheless incorporated elements from Charteris into his manuscript, including characters from past Saint books such as Roger Conway. Barer would go on to write an original Saint novel (more closely related to the character) entitled Capture the Saint, which was also published in 1997.",
"The Saint (radio program)\n The Saint was a radio adventure program in the United States that featured a character (\"a swashbuckling, devil-may-care [wikt] Robin Hood type who, in his attempt to help people, remained just one step ahead of the police and crooks—both of whom he combatted\") created by author Leslie Charteris. As the program's introduction said, The Saint (the alias of Simon Templar), was \"known to millions from books, magazines, and motion pictures.\" Several versions of the program appeared on different networks.",
"Alphonsus Rodriguez\nHolweck, F. G., A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1924. ",
"John Kruse\n John Kruse (1921–2004) was an English film and television screenwriter, director and novelist. He is mostly remembered for his work on ITC classic TV series The Saint, as well as several films of the franchise, and as the author of the best-selling novel Red Omega.",
"List of Old Rossallians\nJ. R. Ackerley – author, editor, and memoirist ; Leslie Charteris – creator of The Saint ; J.G. Farrell – novelist and winner of the Booker Prize ; R. Welldon Finn – historical writer ; F. W. Harvey, DCM – poet ; Raymond M. Patterson – explorer and travel writer ; Clive Phillipps-Wolley – author and big game hunter "
] |
Who is the author of Nevis Mountain Dew? | [
"Steve Carter"
] | author | Nevis Mountain Dew | 5,276,013 | 61 | [
{
"id": "26243970",
"title": "Steve Carter (playwright)",
"text": " Nevis Mountain Dew, the second play in the series, deals with the effects of the patriarch being crippled by paralysis in the Queens section of New York City in the 1950s. Like Whose Life Is It Anyway?, it deals with euthanasia. Both were among the ten productions selected by the Burns Mantle Yearbook as \"The Best Plays of 1978–1979.\"",
"score": "1.7692204"
},
{
"id": "26243973",
"title": "Steve Carter (playwright)",
"text": "1977: Outer Critics Circle Award (Most Promising New Playwright) for Eden ; 1979: Selection, Burns Mantle, The Best Plays of 1978–1979 for Nevis Mountain Dew ; 1979: Drama Desk Award (Outstanding New Play) nomination for Nevis Mountain Dew ; 1980: Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award (Playwriting) for Eden ; 1990: Jeff Award (Best New Work) for Pecong ; 2001: National Black Theatre Festival – Living Legend Award Carter has also received recognition from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts.",
"score": "1.5037092"
},
{
"id": "6764610",
"title": "Ben Nevis Goes East",
"text": " Ben Nevis Goes East is a 1954 comedy novel by the British writer Compton Mackenzie. It features characters introduced in Mackenzie's The Monarch of the Glen. Donald MacDonald of Ben Nevis and his friend Kilwhillie head to British India in order to save his nephew from what is considered a disastrous marriage to a divorced woman.",
"score": "1.4129876"
},
{
"id": "14822809",
"title": "List of people from North Carolina",
"text": "Jason V. Brock (born 1970), author, artist, editor, filmmaker (Charlotte) ; Don Brown (born 1960), author, attorney, former naval officer (Plymouth) ; Betsy Byars (1928–2020), children's author (Charlotte) ; Wiley Cash, novelist (Gastonia) ; Fred Chappell (born 1936), author and North Carolina Poet Laureate 1997–2002 (Canton) ; Ellis Credle (1902–1998), author of books for children and young adults, including Down Down the Mountain (1934) (Hyde County) ; Sarah Dessen (born 1970), writer of novels for young adults (Chapel Hill) ; Thomas Dixon Jr. (1864–1946), author of The Clansman (Shelby) ; Pamela Duncan (born 1961), novelist whose books often focus on working-class Southerners (Asheville) ; John Ehle (1925–2018), author (Asheville) ; Charles Frazier (born 1950), author of best-selling novel Cold Mountain (Asheville) ; Kaye Gibbons (born 1960), author of novels Ellen Foster and A Virtuous Woman (Rocky Mount) ; Jim Grimsley (born 1955), ",
"score": "1.377131"
},
{
"id": "1862994",
"title": "Good Old Mountain Dew",
"text": " Along with being an amateur folklorist and musician, Bascom Lamar Lunsford was a lawyer practicing in rural North Carolina during the 1920s. At the time, the manufacturing of beverage alcohol for non-medicinal purposes was illegal in the United States due to prohibition, but North Carolina residents nevertheless continued their longstanding tradition of making a form of illegal whiskey called moonshine. Lunsford frequently defended local clients that were accused of the practice, and the original lyrics and banjo accompaniment to \"Good Old Mountain Dew\" were written during the course of one of these cases. In 1928, Lunsford recorded the song for Brunswick Records. Scotty Wiseman, of the duo Lulu Belle and Scotty, was a friend of Lunsford's. When Lulu ",
"score": "1.3576231"
},
{
"id": "1862993",
"title": "Good Old Mountain Dew",
"text": " \"Good Old Mountain Dew\" (ROUD 18669), sometimes called simply \"Mountain Dew\" or \"Real Old Mountain Dew\", is an Appalachian folk song composed by Bascom Lamar Lunsford and Scotty Wiseman. There are two versions of the lyrics, a 1928 version written by Lunsford and a 1935 adaptation by Wiseman. Both versions of the song are about moonshine. The 1935 version has been widely covered and has entered into the folk tradition becoming a standard.",
"score": "1.3497922"
},
{
"id": "1427238",
"title": "Mountain Dew",
"text": " Mountain Dew (stylized as Mtn Dew with the homonymic slogan \"Do the Dew\") is a carbonated soft drink brand produced and owned by PepsiCo. The original formula was invented in 1940 by Tennessee beverage bottlers Barney and Ally Hartman. A revised formula was created by Bill Bridgforth in 1958. The rights to this formula were obtained by the Tip Corporation of Marion, Virginia. William H. \"Bill\" Jones of the Tip Corporation further refined the formula, launching that version of Mountain Dew in 1961. In August 1964, the Mountain Dew brand and production rights were acquired from Tip by the Pepsi-Cola ",
"score": "1.3493482"
},
{
"id": "25809156",
"title": "Tina Pepler",
"text": " the Caribbean island of Nevis in the present day and the 17th century. The screenplay was co-written with Justin Hardy and adapted from June Goodfield's book Rivers of Time. Recent radio work includes Forgiving (BBC Radio 4), a drama-documentary inspired by true stories and using interview material; and a drama-documentary called Aftershock, which was broadcast in August 2009, to mark the tenth anniversary of the earthquake in Turkey. Pepler’s PhD thesis on the early days at the BBC focused on the personalities who pioneered broadcasting in the 1920s, and on radio drama as the magnet for the most creative talent working in the infant broadcasting corporation. It is due to be published by Kultura ",
"score": "1.3481386"
},
{
"id": "12998020",
"title": "List of Discworld characters",
"text": " mail-order martial arts lessons (under the alias 'Grand Master Lobsang Dibbler'), 'Dibbler's Genuine Soggy Mountain Dew', souvenir snow-globes and advertising space in the Ankh-Morpork Times. In Men at Arms, he made a brief venture at selling food for trolls and later dwarfs. He is at his best selling intangibles; physical merchandise tends to hamper his patter somewhat. Indeed, he once said he was best at 'selling ideas.' Whenever anything physical is being sold, the claims made on his labels range from euphemisms to outright fabrications. As Nobby Nobbs put it after being told of the 'Soggy Mountain Dew' claim of '150% proof', \"It ain't got no proof—just ",
"score": "1.3446732"
},
{
"id": "4019313",
"title": "Nevisport",
"text": " Nevisport also has very close links to Scotland's newest ski area at Nevis range. Nevisport co-founder Ian Sykes played a pivotal role in the development and construction of the resort, a project that was first imagined back in 1968. 1974 brought the project closer to reality with the publication of a planning report sponsored by the Scottish Tourist Board, but it wasn't until 1986 that the ski centre began serious development with construction beginning in 1988. One week before Christmas 1989, Sykes and his team officially opened Nevis Range to the public, and it was in part due to the enormous success of this project that Sykes received his MBE for ‘services to sport and mountain rescue’ in 1990. The development garnered widespread admiration for the ",
"score": "1.33882"
},
{
"id": "5111635",
"title": "Brian Pinder Kellett",
"text": " Kellett left an \"unprecedented\" legacy of new routes and variations on Ben Nevis in the summers of 1943 and 1944 (page references are to the SMC's 2002 Climbers' Guide, edited by Simon Richardson):",
"score": "1.3367419"
},
{
"id": "2815801",
"title": "Jay Trump",
"text": " time, Ben Nevis II has repeated the feat of winning the Maryland Hunt Cup in 1977 and 1978, and the Grand National in 1980. After his Grand National victory, Jay Trump went to France to run in the Grand Steeplechase. He was made the favorite, but finished third to Hyeres III, who had also won the race in 1964. Jay Trump then returned to the United States, where he ran in one more Maryland Hunt Cup, in 1966. He won that race, and was promptly retired. Mountain Dew was second to Jay Trump in this race for the third time. Mountain Dew also won three Maryland Hunt Cup races; Jay Trump and Mountain Dew formed a tremendous rivalry in the 1960s.",
"score": "1.3350945"
},
{
"id": "14551641",
"title": "May 27",
"text": " 2012 – Simeon Daniel, Nevisian educator and politician, 1st Premier of Nevis (b. 1934) ; 2012 – Friedrich Hirzebruch, German mathematician and academic (b. 1927) ; 2012 – Anahit Perikhanian, Russian-born Armenian Iranologist (b. 1928) ; 2012 – David Rimoin, Canadian-American geneticist and academic (b. 1936) ; 2013 – Jagjit Singh Lyallpuri, Indian politician (b. 1917) ; 2013 – Bill Pertwee, English actor (b. 1926) ; 2013 – Abdoulaye Sékou Sow, Malian politician, Prime Minister of Mali (b. 1931) ; 2014 – Robert Genn, Canadian painter and author (b. 1936) ; 2014 – Helma Sanders-Brahms, German director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1940) ; 2014 – Roberto Vargas, Puerto Rican-American baseball player, ",
"score": "1.3331969"
},
{
"id": "29627198",
"title": "Harold Raeburn",
"text": " On Ben Nevis in particular, he left a tremendous legacy of high-quality routes; indeed, \"of the 30 new routes on Nevis from 1896 to 1921, his name appears on exactly half.\" These include a solo first ascent of Observatory Ridge (V.Diff.) in June 1901, Observatory Buttress (V.Diff.) solo in June 1902, his outstanding eponymous Arete (Severe) two days later on North-East Buttress with William and Jane Inglis Clark, and the first winter ascent of Green Gully (IV,4) in 1906. The latter ascent, with a Swiss alpinist called Eberhard Phildius, was barely recognised in a later guidebook, as he had not climbed the rocks of the Comb on the left, but had instead followed snow and ice in the ",
"score": "1.3330803"
},
{
"id": "12392948",
"title": "January 14",
"text": " Prime Minister of Saint Kitts and Nevis ; 1953 – Hans Westerhoff, Dutch biologist and academic ; 1956 – Étienne Daho, Algerian-French singer-songwriter and producer ; 1957 – Anchee Min, Chinese-American painter, photographer, and author ; 1959 – Geoff Tate, German-American singer-songwriter and musician ; 1961 – Rob Hall, New Zealand mountaineer (d. 1996) ; 1963 – Steven Soderbergh, American director, producer, and screenwriter ; 1964 – Beverly Kinch, English long jumper and sprinter ; 1964 – Shepard Smith, American television journalist ; 1965 – Marc Delissen, Dutch field hockey player, coach, and lawyer ; 1965 – Bob Essensa, Canadian ",
"score": "1.3319193"
},
{
"id": "14541805",
"title": "The Dew Breaker",
"text": " The Dew Breaker is a collection of linked stories by Edwidge Danticat, published in 2004. The title come from Haitian Creole name for a torturer during the regimes of François \"Papa Doc\" and Jean Claude \"Baby Doc\" Duvalier. The book can read either as a novel or collection of short stories. It is divided in nine portions: The Book of the Dead, Seven, Water Child, The Book of Miracles, Night Talkers, The Bridal Seamstress, Monkey Tails, The Funeral Singer, and The Dew Breaker.",
"score": "1.330771"
},
{
"id": "7790453",
"title": "Nevis Radio",
"text": " Weekday daytime presenter Simon Abberley is the only person remunerated. All the other presenters are unpaid volunteers.",
"score": "1.3229742"
},
{
"id": "11803009",
"title": "Stan Brock (philanthropist)",
"text": " He was the author of three books on his experiences in Guyana: Leemo, A True Story of a Man's Friendship with a Mountain Lion (London, 1967), More about Leemo (London, 1967) and Jungle Cowboy (United States, 1969), republished in 1999 as All the Cowboys were Indians. He wrote various articles for magazines, including Readers Digest and Outdoor Life.",
"score": "1.322581"
},
{
"id": "29510352",
"title": "J. H. B. Bell",
"text": " James Horst Brunnerman Bell (Dr J. H. B. Bell) (1896–1975) was arguably the leading Scots mountaineer in the period prior to World War II, going on to edit the SMC Journal for an unequalled 24 years from 1936 to 1959. He put up many serious routes on Ben Nevis and around, and tutored among others the younger W. H. Murray. His \"Scottish Climb\" is still well regarded. One of his first \"ascents\" was \"Long Climb\" (Bell & J. D. B. Wilson, June 1940), a 1400-ft Severe on the Orion Face of Ben Nevis - it is reputedly the longest in the UK. Bell trained as an industrial chemist (DSc, Edinburgh, 1932), and so (according to Murray) regarded food only as \"fuel\", mixing many courses together when preparing for a day on the hill. Bell was always keen to train others, and did several of his new routes with women climbers, including his wife Pat. He published A Progress in Mountaineering in 1950. Bell also revised the guidebook for the Island of Skye (originally produced by Steeple, Barlow & MacRobert in 1931) in 1954.",
"score": "1.3210852"
},
{
"id": "5793977",
"title": "The Dam Busters (book)",
"text": " his duties. Nerney then discussed the issue with John Pudney, who was an editor at News Review. Pudney had liked Paul Brickhill's book of World War II escape attempts Escape to Danger (which he had co-authored with Conrad Norton) and was at the time attempting to turn it into a series for BBC TV. Following up Pudney's recommendation, Nerney approached Brickhill in February 1949, who jumped at the offer. As an officer and a pilot in the RAF and a proven writer and journalist Brickhill was acceptable provided he could obtain written confirmation from the RAAF of his service with the RAF. Eventually this was received in ",
"score": "1.3193569"
}
] | [
"Steve Carter (playwright)\n Nevis Mountain Dew, the second play in the series, deals with the effects of the patriarch being crippled by paralysis in the Queens section of New York City in the 1950s. Like Whose Life Is It Anyway?, it deals with euthanasia. Both were among the ten productions selected by the Burns Mantle Yearbook as \"The Best Plays of 1978–1979.\"",
"Steve Carter (playwright)\n1977: Outer Critics Circle Award (Most Promising New Playwright) for Eden ; 1979: Selection, Burns Mantle, The Best Plays of 1978–1979 for Nevis Mountain Dew ; 1979: Drama Desk Award (Outstanding New Play) nomination for Nevis Mountain Dew ; 1980: Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award (Playwriting) for Eden ; 1990: Jeff Award (Best New Work) for Pecong ; 2001: National Black Theatre Festival – Living Legend Award Carter has also received recognition from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts.",
"Ben Nevis Goes East\n Ben Nevis Goes East is a 1954 comedy novel by the British writer Compton Mackenzie. It features characters introduced in Mackenzie's The Monarch of the Glen. Donald MacDonald of Ben Nevis and his friend Kilwhillie head to British India in order to save his nephew from what is considered a disastrous marriage to a divorced woman.",
"List of people from North Carolina\nJason V. Brock (born 1970), author, artist, editor, filmmaker (Charlotte) ; Don Brown (born 1960), author, attorney, former naval officer (Plymouth) ; Betsy Byars (1928–2020), children's author (Charlotte) ; Wiley Cash, novelist (Gastonia) ; Fred Chappell (born 1936), author and North Carolina Poet Laureate 1997–2002 (Canton) ; Ellis Credle (1902–1998), author of books for children and young adults, including Down Down the Mountain (1934) (Hyde County) ; Sarah Dessen (born 1970), writer of novels for young adults (Chapel Hill) ; Thomas Dixon Jr. (1864–1946), author of The Clansman (Shelby) ; Pamela Duncan (born 1961), novelist whose books often focus on working-class Southerners (Asheville) ; John Ehle (1925–2018), author (Asheville) ; Charles Frazier (born 1950), author of best-selling novel Cold Mountain (Asheville) ; Kaye Gibbons (born 1960), author of novels Ellen Foster and A Virtuous Woman (Rocky Mount) ; Jim Grimsley (born 1955), ",
"Good Old Mountain Dew\n Along with being an amateur folklorist and musician, Bascom Lamar Lunsford was a lawyer practicing in rural North Carolina during the 1920s. At the time, the manufacturing of beverage alcohol for non-medicinal purposes was illegal in the United States due to prohibition, but North Carolina residents nevertheless continued their longstanding tradition of making a form of illegal whiskey called moonshine. Lunsford frequently defended local clients that were accused of the practice, and the original lyrics and banjo accompaniment to \"Good Old Mountain Dew\" were written during the course of one of these cases. In 1928, Lunsford recorded the song for Brunswick Records. Scotty Wiseman, of the duo Lulu Belle and Scotty, was a friend of Lunsford's. When Lulu ",
"Good Old Mountain Dew\n \"Good Old Mountain Dew\" (ROUD 18669), sometimes called simply \"Mountain Dew\" or \"Real Old Mountain Dew\", is an Appalachian folk song composed by Bascom Lamar Lunsford and Scotty Wiseman. There are two versions of the lyrics, a 1928 version written by Lunsford and a 1935 adaptation by Wiseman. Both versions of the song are about moonshine. The 1935 version has been widely covered and has entered into the folk tradition becoming a standard.",
"Mountain Dew\n Mountain Dew (stylized as Mtn Dew with the homonymic slogan \"Do the Dew\") is a carbonated soft drink brand produced and owned by PepsiCo. The original formula was invented in 1940 by Tennessee beverage bottlers Barney and Ally Hartman. A revised formula was created by Bill Bridgforth in 1958. The rights to this formula were obtained by the Tip Corporation of Marion, Virginia. William H. \"Bill\" Jones of the Tip Corporation further refined the formula, launching that version of Mountain Dew in 1961. In August 1964, the Mountain Dew brand and production rights were acquired from Tip by the Pepsi-Cola ",
"Tina Pepler\n the Caribbean island of Nevis in the present day and the 17th century. The screenplay was co-written with Justin Hardy and adapted from June Goodfield's book Rivers of Time. Recent radio work includes Forgiving (BBC Radio 4), a drama-documentary inspired by true stories and using interview material; and a drama-documentary called Aftershock, which was broadcast in August 2009, to mark the tenth anniversary of the earthquake in Turkey. Pepler’s PhD thesis on the early days at the BBC focused on the personalities who pioneered broadcasting in the 1920s, and on radio drama as the magnet for the most creative talent working in the infant broadcasting corporation. It is due to be published by Kultura ",
"List of Discworld characters\n mail-order martial arts lessons (under the alias 'Grand Master Lobsang Dibbler'), 'Dibbler's Genuine Soggy Mountain Dew', souvenir snow-globes and advertising space in the Ankh-Morpork Times. In Men at Arms, he made a brief venture at selling food for trolls and later dwarfs. He is at his best selling intangibles; physical merchandise tends to hamper his patter somewhat. Indeed, he once said he was best at 'selling ideas.' Whenever anything physical is being sold, the claims made on his labels range from euphemisms to outright fabrications. As Nobby Nobbs put it after being told of the 'Soggy Mountain Dew' claim of '150% proof', \"It ain't got no proof—just ",
"Nevisport\n Nevisport also has very close links to Scotland's newest ski area at Nevis range. Nevisport co-founder Ian Sykes played a pivotal role in the development and construction of the resort, a project that was first imagined back in 1968. 1974 brought the project closer to reality with the publication of a planning report sponsored by the Scottish Tourist Board, but it wasn't until 1986 that the ski centre began serious development with construction beginning in 1988. One week before Christmas 1989, Sykes and his team officially opened Nevis Range to the public, and it was in part due to the enormous success of this project that Sykes received his MBE for ‘services to sport and mountain rescue’ in 1990. The development garnered widespread admiration for the ",
"Brian Pinder Kellett\n Kellett left an \"unprecedented\" legacy of new routes and variations on Ben Nevis in the summers of 1943 and 1944 (page references are to the SMC's 2002 Climbers' Guide, edited by Simon Richardson):",
"Jay Trump\n time, Ben Nevis II has repeated the feat of winning the Maryland Hunt Cup in 1977 and 1978, and the Grand National in 1980. After his Grand National victory, Jay Trump went to France to run in the Grand Steeplechase. He was made the favorite, but finished third to Hyeres III, who had also won the race in 1964. Jay Trump then returned to the United States, where he ran in one more Maryland Hunt Cup, in 1966. He won that race, and was promptly retired. Mountain Dew was second to Jay Trump in this race for the third time. Mountain Dew also won three Maryland Hunt Cup races; Jay Trump and Mountain Dew formed a tremendous rivalry in the 1960s.",
"May 27\n 2012 – Simeon Daniel, Nevisian educator and politician, 1st Premier of Nevis (b. 1934) ; 2012 – Friedrich Hirzebruch, German mathematician and academic (b. 1927) ; 2012 – Anahit Perikhanian, Russian-born Armenian Iranologist (b. 1928) ; 2012 – David Rimoin, Canadian-American geneticist and academic (b. 1936) ; 2013 – Jagjit Singh Lyallpuri, Indian politician (b. 1917) ; 2013 – Bill Pertwee, English actor (b. 1926) ; 2013 – Abdoulaye Sékou Sow, Malian politician, Prime Minister of Mali (b. 1931) ; 2014 – Robert Genn, Canadian painter and author (b. 1936) ; 2014 – Helma Sanders-Brahms, German director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1940) ; 2014 – Roberto Vargas, Puerto Rican-American baseball player, ",
"Harold Raeburn\n On Ben Nevis in particular, he left a tremendous legacy of high-quality routes; indeed, \"of the 30 new routes on Nevis from 1896 to 1921, his name appears on exactly half.\" These include a solo first ascent of Observatory Ridge (V.Diff.) in June 1901, Observatory Buttress (V.Diff.) solo in June 1902, his outstanding eponymous Arete (Severe) two days later on North-East Buttress with William and Jane Inglis Clark, and the first winter ascent of Green Gully (IV,4) in 1906. The latter ascent, with a Swiss alpinist called Eberhard Phildius, was barely recognised in a later guidebook, as he had not climbed the rocks of the Comb on the left, but had instead followed snow and ice in the ",
"January 14\n Prime Minister of Saint Kitts and Nevis ; 1953 – Hans Westerhoff, Dutch biologist and academic ; 1956 – Étienne Daho, Algerian-French singer-songwriter and producer ; 1957 – Anchee Min, Chinese-American painter, photographer, and author ; 1959 – Geoff Tate, German-American singer-songwriter and musician ; 1961 – Rob Hall, New Zealand mountaineer (d. 1996) ; 1963 – Steven Soderbergh, American director, producer, and screenwriter ; 1964 – Beverly Kinch, English long jumper and sprinter ; 1964 – Shepard Smith, American television journalist ; 1965 – Marc Delissen, Dutch field hockey player, coach, and lawyer ; 1965 – Bob Essensa, Canadian ",
"The Dew Breaker\n The Dew Breaker is a collection of linked stories by Edwidge Danticat, published in 2004. The title come from Haitian Creole name for a torturer during the regimes of François \"Papa Doc\" and Jean Claude \"Baby Doc\" Duvalier. The book can read either as a novel or collection of short stories. It is divided in nine portions: The Book of the Dead, Seven, Water Child, The Book of Miracles, Night Talkers, The Bridal Seamstress, Monkey Tails, The Funeral Singer, and The Dew Breaker.",
"Nevis Radio\n Weekday daytime presenter Simon Abberley is the only person remunerated. All the other presenters are unpaid volunteers.",
"Stan Brock (philanthropist)\n He was the author of three books on his experiences in Guyana: Leemo, A True Story of a Man's Friendship with a Mountain Lion (London, 1967), More about Leemo (London, 1967) and Jungle Cowboy (United States, 1969), republished in 1999 as All the Cowboys were Indians. He wrote various articles for magazines, including Readers Digest and Outdoor Life.",
"J. H. B. Bell\n James Horst Brunnerman Bell (Dr J. H. B. Bell) (1896–1975) was arguably the leading Scots mountaineer in the period prior to World War II, going on to edit the SMC Journal for an unequalled 24 years from 1936 to 1959. He put up many serious routes on Ben Nevis and around, and tutored among others the younger W. H. Murray. His \"Scottish Climb\" is still well regarded. One of his first \"ascents\" was \"Long Climb\" (Bell & J. D. B. Wilson, June 1940), a 1400-ft Severe on the Orion Face of Ben Nevis - it is reputedly the longest in the UK. Bell trained as an industrial chemist (DSc, Edinburgh, 1932), and so (according to Murray) regarded food only as \"fuel\", mixing many courses together when preparing for a day on the hill. Bell was always keen to train others, and did several of his new routes with women climbers, including his wife Pat. He published A Progress in Mountaineering in 1950. Bell also revised the guidebook for the Island of Skye (originally produced by Steeple, Barlow & MacRobert in 1931) in 1954.",
"The Dam Busters (book)\n his duties. Nerney then discussed the issue with John Pudney, who was an editor at News Review. Pudney had liked Paul Brickhill's book of World War II escape attempts Escape to Danger (which he had co-authored with Conrad Norton) and was at the time attempting to turn it into a series for BBC TV. Following up Pudney's recommendation, Nerney approached Brickhill in February 1949, who jumped at the offer. As an officer and a pilot in the RAF and a proven writer and journalist Brickhill was acceptable provided he could obtain written confirmation from the RAAF of his service with the RAF. Eventually this was received in "
] |