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・ Bobby Wayne Woods
・ Bobby Weale
・ Bobby Weaver
・ Bobby Webb
・ Bobby Weed
・ Bobby Wegener
・ Bobby Weinstein
・ Bobby Wellins
・ Bobby Wheelock
・ Bobby Whitehead
・ Bobby Whitelaw
・ Bobby Whiteley
・ Bobby Whitlock
・ Bobby Whitlock (album)
・ Bobby Whitton
Bobby Wilder
・ Bobby Wilkins
・ Bobby Wilks
・ Bobby William Austin
・ Bobby Williams
・ Bobby Williams (footballer, born 1932)
・ Bobby Williams (footballer, born 1940)
・ Bobby Williamson
・ Bobby Williamson (footballer, born 1933)
・ Bobby Willis
・ Bobby Wills
・ Bobby Wilson
・ Bobby Wilson (Australian rules footballer)
・ Bobby Wilson (baseball)
・ Bobby Wilson (basketball, born 1944)


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Bobby Wilder : ウィキペディア英語版
Bobby Wilder

Robert S. "Bobby" Wilder (born July 30, 1964) is the current head coach of the Old Dominion Monarchs football team. He is only the second coach all-time in the program's history and the first since football's rebirth at the school in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) in 2009.
Old Dominion played football for eleven seasons when the university was a two-year institution known as the Norfolk Division of the College of William and Mary. Between 1930 and 1941, the team compiled a record of 62–19–4. The program was then discontinued due to a rule banning freshman players and a US$10,000 debt.〔(Great Moments; ODU Alumni Magazine - Fall 2005 )〕
Hired in 2007, Wilder spent the first two years recruiting and starting up the program. In 2009, in his first competitive season as head coach, the Monarchs finished 9–2. That was the best winning record ever for a first-year program in college football's modern era.〔(Bobby Wilder Profile, odusports.com )〕 The Monarchs were outscored by a total of only eight points in their two losses.
Wilder's inaugural team finished the year ranked in the top ten in five FCS statistical categories, including second in sacks allowed, third in scoring offense, turnover margin and net punting. The 2009 Monarchs were ninth in rushing offense.〔
ODU was fifth in FCS attendance in 2009, selling out all of their home games in the 19,782-seat Foreman Field.〔(Radford, Rich; "College Football 2010 | ODU game-by-game preview"; hamptonroads.com )〕
In his first three years, Wilder has led Old Dominion to a 26-7 record. In 2011, in the Monarchs first season in the Colonial Athletic Association, they earned a berth in the 2011 FCS playoffs, hosting crosstown rival Norfolk State. Also in 2011, after playing 27 games in its "modern era", ODU received its first Top 25 ranking on October 3, coming in at No. 21 in The Sports Network poll. The Monarchs were ranked among the Top Ten after competing in 33 games. 〔("Football Monarchs to Host Norfolk State in First Round of FCS Playoffs", odusports.com, November 20, 2011 ) 〕
==Personal==
Wilder grew up in Madison, Maine and attended Madison Area Memorial High School, where he graduated in 1982. A highly recruited quarterback, Wilder opted to play his college ball close to home. Upon graduation from the University of Maine in 1987 with a degree in physical education, Wilder served as a graduate assistant coach for two seasons under Jack Bicknell at Boston College, where he earned his master's degree in educational administration in 1990. He then returned to Maine, where he was an assistant coach, assistant head coach and finally associate head coach from 1990 to 2006.〔
He and his wife Pam have two sons, Derek and Drew. They reside in Norfolk.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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