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・ Jonathan Clancy
・ Jonathan Clare
・ Jonathan Clark
・ Jonathan Clark (bishop)
・ Jonathan Clark (footballer)
・ Jonathan Clark (soldier)
・ Jonathan Clark House
・ Jonathan Clark Rogers
・ Jonathan Clarke (cyclist)
・ Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs
・ Jonathan Clay (musician)
・ Jonathan Clayden
・ Jonathan Clements
・ Jonathan Cleveland
・ Jonathan Club
Jonathan Coachman
・ Jonathan Coates
・ Jonathan Cochet
・ Jonathan Coe
・ Jonathan Coeffic
・ Jonathan Cohen
・ Jonathan Cohen (actor)
・ Jonathan Cohen (conductor)
・ Jonathan Cohen (musician)
・ Jonathan Cohen (television executive)
・ Jonathan Cohler
・ Jonathan Cohn
・ Jonathan Cole
・ Jonathan Cole (disambiguation)
・ Jonathan Coleclough / Bass Communion / Colin Potter


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Jonathan Coachman : ウィキペディア英語版
Jonathan Coachman

Jonathan William Coachman〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= TV.com - Jonathan Coachman Biography )〕 (born August 12, 1972), also known as ''"The Coach"'', is a sports interviewer signed to ESPN who is currently interviewing WWE Superstars. He is a former professional wrestling color commentator and authority figure. He is also a former college basketball player, and football play-by-play announcer. He is best known for his work with WWE, where he spent nine years as a commentator, interviewer, and occasional wrestler.
He was recently a nationally syndicated afternoon drive host on ESPN Radio (''Coach & Company''), and serves as an anchor for ''SportsCenter'' on ESPN. The final weekday broadcast of Coach & Company was Friday, September 27, 2013. The show has since moved to Sundays.
==Early life==
Before embarking on an announcing career in professional wrestling, Coachman was a high school basketball player. After two state basketball championships at McPherson High School in McPherson, Kansas, Coachman moved across town to continue playing for McPherson College.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Jonathan Coachman - Biography )〕 While at McPherson, Coachman's interests included participating in theatre, serving as the sports editor for the school newspaper, and doing play-by-play and color commentary for the local football and basketball radio broadcasts. Coachman was also a sports reporter/anchor at KAKE in Wichita, Kansas
Coachman also starred in many instructional videos used for technical education classrooms of middle schools and high schools. One set of videos featured "Coach" instructing people on flight navigation and the basics of airplanes. He also had a "boyfriend-in-a-box" modeled after him during college. Coachman also worked for local Kansas City news station KMBC-TV, where he was a correspondent for ''Larry King Lives coverage of Owen Hart's death in May 1999.〔
Coachman's father is a retired United Methodist minister. He is currently married and resides in Southington, Connecticut. His nickname comes from his surname—he has never coached any sport.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Jonathan Coachman」の詳細全文を読む



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