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The Fender Contemporary Telecaster models used the same tremolo systems as the Fender Contemporary Stratocaster models. Black Francis used a Fender Contemporary Telecaster in the Pixies and Neal Schon played a Contemporary Stratocaster in the music video for Journey's Separate Ways , also the band's first ever video.
The Yokohama B-Corsairs (横浜ビー・コルセアーズ, Yokohama Bii Koruse'a-zu) are a Japanese professional basketball team that compete in the first division of the B.League. Following the team's establishment in 2010, they participated in the Eastern Conference of the bj league for five seasons and in 2013 became the first team based in ...
The B.League is a professional men's basketball league in Japan that began play in September 2016. [4] [5] The league is operated by the Japan Professional Basketball League and was formed as a result of a merger between the National Basketball League that was operated by the FIBA-affiliated Japan Basketball Association and the independently operated bj league.
Slam Dunk Super Pro Basketball: 1987 Intellivision: Realtime Associates INTV Corp. Street Sports Basketball: 1987 Amiga Amstrad CPC Apple II Commodore 64 MS-DOS ZX Spectrum: Epyx: Epyx: Great Basketball: 1987 Master System - -Basket Master: 1987 Commodore 64: Dinamic/Imagine-Sam & Ed Basketball: 1987 Commodore 64 - -Jordan vs. Bird: One on One ...
All-Pro Basketball, known as Zenbei!! Pro Basketball in Japan , is a basketball video-game developed by Aicom and published by Vic Tokai for the Nintendo Entertainment System . It is played using two teams of five players on a full-length basketball court, and a roster of eight different fictional teams.
In July 2015, the team announced its participation in the inaugural season of Japan's professional basketball league which debuted in 2016, competing in the first division. [2] Prior to joining the league, the club accordingly changed its name to "San-en NeoPhoenix", and began playing their home games in Toyohashi .
The league was operated as a competitor to the established Japan Super League which was run by the Japan Basketball Association, the official governing body of basketball in Japan. Over the next ten years the league saw continual expansion, with at least one new team joining every season, reaching 24 teams divided into two conferences in its ...
[2] [3] [4] The number of high school basketball players reached a record high of more than 113,000 boys in 1995, and over 77,000 girls in 1994. [4] The Japan Basketball Association later presented Inoue with a special commendation for his contributions to the sport. [5] However, the numbers have continued to drop since then. [4]