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・ Bill Jones (American football)
・ Bill Jones (artist)
・ Bill Jones (Australian footballer, born 1887)
・ Bill Jones (Australian footballer, born 1891)
・ Bill Jones (Australian footballer, born 1897)
・ Bill Jones (Australian footballer, born 1912)
・ Bill Hume (cartoonist)
・ Bill Hunnefield
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・ Bill Hunt (cricketer)
・ Bill Hunt (racing driver)
・ Bill Hunter
・ Bill Hunter (actor)
・ Bill Hunter (catcher)
・ Bill Hunter (footballer, born 1900)
Bill Hunter (ice hockey)
・ Bill Hunter (journalist)
・ Bill Hunter (New Zealand footballer)
・ Bill Hunter (outfielder)
・ Bill Hunter (politician)
・ Bill Hunter Memorial Trophy
・ Bill Hunter Trophy
・ Bill Huntington
・ Bill Hurst
・ Bill Hurst (footballer)
・ Bill Husted
・ Bill Hutchins
・ Bill Hutchinson (American football)
・ Bill Hutchinson (baseball)
・ Bill Hutchinson (politician)


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Bill Hunter (ice hockey) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bill Hunter (ice hockey)

William Dickenson ("Wild Bill") Hunter, CM (May 5, 1920 – December 16, 2002) was a Canadian hockey player, general manager and coach. Hunter was involved in hockey, football, baseball, softball and curling but he is best known for founding the Western Hockey League, being a key player in the upstart World Hockey Association and for his efforts to bring professional hockey to previously overlooked Western Canadian cities, especially in Edmonton and (unsuccessfully) in Saskatoon.
==Early years==
Hunter was born in Saskatoon, the first of ten children and founded his first competitive sports team when he was 18. Hunter's ''Saskatoon Dukes'' football club eventually became the Saskatoon Hilltops who as of 2012 had won 16 national junior titles. Hunter then attended Notre Dame College in Wilcox, Saskatchewan from 1938 to 1940, where he managed the college baseball team.
Following the outbreak of World War II Hunter left school to join the Royal Canadian Air Force and served for about four years as a pilot based in England. Hunter flew Beauforts, Spitfires and Hurricanes before returning to Saskatoon in 1944 where he worked briefly for CFQC Radio before opening Hunter's Sporting Goods in North Battleford the following year.
Between 1945 and 1949 Hunter coached and managed hockey teams in North Battleford, Regina, Moose Jaw and Yorkton. It was during these years that Hunter was nicknamed "Wild Bill" following a dispute with a referee. Hunter did not like the nickname especially at first, but it stuck with him for the rest of his life.
In 1950, Hunter founded the first curling bonspiel to be held on artificial ice, the Quaker Car Curling Bonspiel. He also managed and coached the Saskatoon Quakers hockey club until 1952. From 1953 to 1955 he owned, managed and coached the Medicine Hat Tigers.

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